Harris County is a county located in the U.S. state of Texas. As of the 2020 census, the population was 4,731,145, and was estimated to be 5,009,302 in 2024, making it the most populous county in Texas and the third-most populous county in the United States. Its county seat is Houston, the most populous city in Texas and the fourth-most populous city in the United States. The county was founded on December 22, 1836 and organized on March 10, 1837. It is named for John Richardson Harris, who founded the town of Harrisburg on Buffalo Bayou in 1826. It contains over 16% of the state's population.Based on the 2024 Estimate: 5,009,302 / 31,290,831 (TX pop.) = 16.01% Harris County is included in the nine-county Greater Houston metropolitan statistical area, which is the fifth-most populous metropolitan area in the United States.
The first recorded European settlers in Harris County arrived in 1822. Their schooner sailed into Galveston Bay and ran aground on the Red Fish Bar. Some of those passengers traveled further up the bay system, but it is not known whether they settled up Buffalo Bayou or the San Jacinto River. One of these passengers, a Mr. Ryder, settled at what is now known as Morgan's Point, Texas. Also in 1822, John Iiams settled his family at Cedar Point after sailing from Berwick's Bay, Louisiana. Dr. Johnson Hunter arrived just after Iiams. He also wrecked his boat near Galveston. He settled at Morgan's Point and was a grantee of land there. Nathaniel Lynch settled in the area and operated a ferry.
In 1824, the land empresario, Stephen F. Austin convened at the house of William Scott for the purpose of conveying titles for Mexican headrights. He was joined by the land commissioner, Baron von Bastrop, and Austin's secretary, Samuel May Williams. About thirty families gained legal titles to land in what would later be known as Harris County. A few immigrants settled on Buffalo Bayou in these early years, including Moses Callahan, Ezekial Thomas, and the Vince brothers.
Nicolas Clopper arrived in the Galveston Bay area from Ohio in the 1820s. He attempted to develop Buffalo Bayou as a trading conduit for the Brazos River valley. He acquired land at Morgan's Point in 1826. John Richardson Harris (1790–1829), for whom the county was later named, arrived in 1824. Harris had moved his family to Sainte Genevieve, Missouri Territory, where they had been residing until the early 1820s.
Harris was granted a league of land (about 4,428 acres) at Buffalo Bayou. He platted the town of Harrisburg in 1826, while he established a trading post and a grist mill there. He ran boats transporting goods between New Orleans and Harrisburg until his death in the fall of 1829.
The First Congress of the Republic of Texas established Harrisburg County on December 22, 1836. The original county boundaries included Galveston Island, but were redrawn to its current configuration in May 1838.
The area has had a number of severe weather events, such as the following hurricanes and tropical storms:
As of the 2023 American Community Survey, there are 1,728,103 estimated households in Harris County with an average of 2.73 persons per household. The county has a median household income of $73,104. Approximately 16.0% of the county's population lives at or below the poverty line. Harris County has an estimated 67.3% employment rate, with 33.7% of the population holding a bachelor's degree or higher and 82.5% holding a high school diploma.
The median age in the county was 34.8 years.
+ Harris County, Texas – Racial and ethnic composition !Race / Ethnicity ( NH = Non-Hispanic) !Pop 1980 !Pop 1990 !Pop 2000 !Pop 2010 !style="background-color: #ffffb3;" | Pop 2020 !% 1980 !% 1990 !% 2000 !% 2010 !style="background-color: #ffffb3;" | % 2020 | |||
White alone (NH) | 1,509,430 | 1,528,113 | 1,432,264 | 1,349,646 | 27.68% |
Black or African American alone (NH) | 469,290 | 527,964 | 619,694 | 754,258 | 18.72% |
Native American or Alaska Native alone (NH) | 5,346 | 6,143 | 7,103 | 8,150 | 0.18% |
Asian Americans alone (NH) | 46,355 | 106,327 | 173,026 | 249,853 | 7.29% |
Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander alone (NH) | x | x | 1,392 | 2,260 | 0.07% |
Other race alone (NH) | 10,049 | 4,717 | 4,499 | 7,914 | 0.49% |
Mixed race or Multiracial (NH) | x | x | 42,849 | 48,838 | 2.57% |
Hispanic or Latino (any race) | 369,077 | 644,935 | 1,119,751 | 1,671,540 | 43.01% |
Total | 2,409,547 | 2,818,199 | 3,400,578 | 4,092,459 | 100.00% |
With a poverty rate of 15.6% as of 2020, Children At Risk—a local nonprofit research organization—estimated 21% of the Harris County children lived in poverty, 6.5 per 1,000 die before age one, and 38% drop out of high school as of 2007.
As of 2023, Harris County had the second largest population of Black Americans in the United States, behind only Cook County, Illinois. Harris also has the second largest Hispanic population in the nation, behind only Los Angeles County, California.
In 2020, 55.6% of the county aged five and older spoke English only, while 44.4% spoke another language at home, alone or together with English; Spanish remained the second most spoken language (35%).
Besides the county judge and commissioners, the other elective offices found in most counties include the county attorney, county and district clerks, county treasurer, sheriff, tax assessor-collector, justices of the peace, and constables. As a part of the checks and balances system, counties have an auditor appointed by the district courts.
Harris County was one of the earliest areas of Texas to turn Republican. It voted Republican in all but one presidential election from 1952 to 2004, the lone break coming when native Texan Lyndon Johnson carried it in his 44-state landslide in 1964. In 2008, Barack Obama was the first Democrat to win the county since Texas native Lyndon Johnson in 1964. The city of Houston itself holds one of the highest concentrations of Democratic voters in the state, while suburban areas such as Cypress, Spring, and Katy in the county's western and northern areas, tend to be strongly Republican. In 2016, Hillary Clinton won the county by the largest margin for a Democrat since 1964. The Democratic Party performed very strongly in the county during the 2018 elections, as it did nationwide. In 2020, Joe Biden improved Clinton's performance by two points while Donald Trump only increased his vote share by one point. In 2024, Trump increased his vote share by 4 points to earn 46% to Harris 51%, the closest margin since 2012. Though it has shifted towards Democrats in recent years, Harris County has nevertheless voted to the right of Dallas, Travis County, Bexar, and El Paso, each of which has a smaller population.
In 2013, Allen Turner of the Houston Chronicle said that residents of Harris County were "consistently conservative in elections" and that they were, according to a Rice University Kinder Institute for Urban Research opinion poll, "surprisingly liberal on topics such as immigration, gun control and equal matrimonial rights for same-sex couples". Harris is regarded as a moderate or swing county in Texas, and has been a bellwether in presidential elections, voting for winners of every presidential election from 2000 through 2012 (both Barack Obama and Texas resident George W. Bush won the county twice).
As a result of the Obama sweep in 2008, many Democratic candidates in contests for lower-level offices also benefited, and many Republican incumbents were replaced by Democrats in the Harris County courthouse. Some of the defeated Republican district court judges were later re-appointed to vacant District Court benches by Governor Rick Perry. In 2018, Democrats swept the court capturing all 59 seats on the civil, criminal, family, juvenile and probate courts.
The Kinder Institute's Houston Survey in 2018 found that from 2014 through 2018 the number of Houston residents who supported adoption of children by same-sex couples climbed above 50% and remained there, while in 2017 over 56% of residents reported gay or lesbian persons among their circle of close personal friends. A 2013 opinion poll had found that 46% of Harris County residents supported same-sex marriage, up from 37% in 2001. Just above 82% favored offering illegal immigrants a path to citizenship provided they speak English and have no criminal record, holding from 83% in 2013, which was up from 19% in 2009. In 2013, 87% supported background checks for all firearms, the latest year that question was included in the Kinder Houston Survey. This measure has moved up steadily from 60% in 1985 to 69% in 2000.
The Texas First Court of Appeals and the Texas Fourteenth Court of Appeals, since September 3, 2010, are located in the 1910 Harris County courthouse." Contact Information ." Texas First Court of Appeals. Retrieved on September 12, 2011. "NEW ADDRESS EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 3, 2010 First Court of Appeals 301 Fannin Houston, Texas 77002-2066"" Contact Information ." Texas Fourteenth Court of Appeals. Retrieved on September 12, 2011. "NEW ADDRESS EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 3, 2010 Fourteenth Court of Appeals 301 Fannin, Suite 245 Houston, Texas 77002" Previously they were located on the campus of the South Texas College of Law." Contact Information." Texas First Court of Appeals. Retrieved on March 9, 2010. "Physical Location First Court of Appeals 1307 San Jacinto Street, 10th Floor (intersection of Clay and San Jacinto Streets) Houston, Texas. Contact Information." Texas Fourteenth Court of Appeals. Retrieved on March 9, 2010. "Physical Location Fourteenth Court of Appeals 1307 San Jacinto, 11th Floor Houston, TX 77002 "
The Harris County Jail Complex of the Harris County Sheriff's Office (HCSO) is the largest in Texas, and one of the largest in the nation. In July 2012, the facility held 9,113 prisoners. To handle overcrowding in the facility, the county had to ship inmates to other counties and some are housed out of the state.
The county has a potter's field, the Harris County Cemetery on Oates Road in Houston, which previously had housing for elderly people. It has of land. It was established in 1921 on property taken from police officers who had acted corruptly. The county paid $80,000 for of land, then put in the Harris County Home For the Aged, a poor farm for elderly people of all races which had a capacity of 100; the poor farm opened in 1922. Around that time, the county cemetery was also established there. The Harris County Commissioners closed the poor farm in August 1958. In 2014, no more burials were allowed to occur at the Oates Road facility due to overcapacity.
By 2013 the county was building a second potter's field due to overcapacity at the first. Harris County Eastgate Cemetery had started operations in 2014. It is near the Crosby census-designated place and has a Crosby postal address. - The cemetery referred to here is the new one in the Crosby area, and not the old one on Oates Road.
The county had a poor farm in what is now West University Place that closed in 1923. The county cemetery was formerly there; the bodies were transferred to the new property.
The county has an elections administrator and elections office, which was non-partisan but under the oversight of Democrat Lina Hidalgo, the Harris County Judge. The State of Texas Legislature passed a law, SB 1750, that asks for the position to be abolished effective September 2023, as the law states that any county with at least 3,500,000 persons should have elections done by the clerk and tax assessor-collector; of all Texas counties, only Harris would be affected. This was done following failings in the 2022 election, as confirmed by the investigation initiated by Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg's office. In August 2023, Karin Crump, the presiding judge of the 250th civil district court of Travis County, stated that this went against the Texas Constitution, citing how the law only affected one county. Crump's ruling was overturned by the Texas Supreme Court.
The Harris County Sheriff's Office operates jail facilities and is the primary provider of law enforcement services to the unincorporated areas of the county. The sheriff is the conservator of the peace in the county. The Harris County jail facilities are in northern downtown on the north side of the Buffalo Bayou. The 1200 Jail, The 1200 Jail ." Harris County, Texas. Accessed September 12, 2008. the 1307 Jail, (originally a TDCJ facility, leased by the county)," The 1307 Jail ." Harris County, Texas. Accessed September 12, 2008. and the 701 Jail (formed from existing warehouse storage space) are on the same site." The 701 Jail ." Harris County, Texas. Accessed September 12, 2008.
The Community Services Department provides community services. The department maintains the Oates Road Cemetery (also known as the Harris County Cemetery) for indigents in eastern Houston, near the former Southern Bible College. In March 2010, the county adopted a cremation first policy, meaning that the default preference for most indigents is to have them cremated instead of buried. As of 2010, the county authorized the Community Services Department to purchase about of land in the Huffman area so the county will have additional spaces for indigent burials.Taylor, David. " County to purchase land for cemetery." Lake Houston Sentinel. September 2, 2010. Retrieved on September 7, 2010.
The Harris County Housing Authority (HCHA) is a governmental nonprofit corporation which addresses the need for quality affordable housing. The HCHA has been recognized by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development as the highest performing housing authority in the region and was named one of America's 10 best Public Housing Authorities. Guy R. Rankin, IV is chief executive officer of Harris County Housing Authority (HCHA).
As of 2001, Kegans and Lychner serves male state jail offenders from Harris County, with Kegans getting lower-risk offenders and Lychner getting higher-risk and special-needs offenders. If both of the male state jails in Harris County are full, excess offenders go to the Gist Unit in Jefferson County. Female state jail offenders from Harris County go to the Plane Unit in Liberty County." State Jail Evaluation Summary Report Kegans State Jail." Texas Department of Criminal Justice. October 2000. Retrieved on July 2, 2010.
The South Texas Intermediate Sanction Facility Unit, a parole confinement facility for males operated by Global Expertise in Outsourcing, is in downtown Houston, west of Daikin Park." SOUTH TEXAS (XM) ." Texas Department of Criminal Justice. Accessed September 12, 2008.
The combined yearly sum spent by these agencies circa 2018 was $1.6 billion. That year the Rice University Kinder Institute for Urban Research released a report advocating for consolidating several of these agencies as a way of saving taxpayer money.
Other elected positions in Harris County include a County Attorney, a County Clerk, a District Attorney, a court clerk, a Sheriff, eight , a Tax Assessor-Collector, a treasurer, and every judge in the county except municipal judges, who are appointed by the mayors and confirmed by city councils of their respective cities.
Many of the organs of the Harris County government reside in the Harris County Campus in Downtown Houston.
The University of Houston System's annual impact on the Houston-area's economy as of 2011 equates to that of a major corporation: $1.1 billion in new funds attracted annually to the Houston area, $3.13 billion in total economic benefit, and 24,000 local jobs generated. This is in addition to the over 12,500 new graduates the UH System produces every year who enter the workforce in Houston and throughout Texas. These degree-holders tend to stay in Houston; after five years, 80.5% of graduates are still living and working in the region.
In 2009, 20% of the office space in northwest Harris County was vacant. As of that year, more office space was being built; in 2010, northwest Harris will have twice the amount of office space that it had in 2009. The vacancy rate in the area near Farm to Market Road 1960 and Texas State Highway 249 in north Harris County was 53% in 2009.McGuire, Lee. " More Houston office space sitting empty ." Texas Cable News. Friday January 23, 2009. Retrieved on November 13, 2009.
Various companies are headquartered in incorporated and unincorporated areas throughout Harris County.
Academy Sports and Outdoors, a sporting goods retailer, has its corporate offices and product distribution center in unincorporated western Harris County." Contact Academy Sports & Outdoors ." Academy Sports and Outdoors. Accessed September 5, 2008. Hewlett-Packard formerly operated its United States region office in a complex northwest unincorporated Harris County; the complex formerly belonged to Compaq prior to Compaq's merger with HP." HP Office Locations." Hewlett-Packard. Accessed September 6, 2008." Compaq Offices Worldwide." (December 25, 1996) Compaq. Accessed September 6, 2008. The HP offices, which are now occupied by Hewlett Packard Enterprise, are now in a limited purpose annexation in Houston.Compare the full street address to the map.
Smith International has its headquarters in the Greenspoint district and in an unincorporated area in Harris County." Welcome to SMITH ." Smith International. Retrieved on December 8, 2009." Boundary Map ." Greenspoint Management District. Retrieved on May 19, 2009. BJ Services Company has its headquarters in the Spring Branch district and in unincorporated Harris County." Global Locations." BJ Services Company. July 3, 2007. Retrieved on December 8, 2009." Boundary Map." Spring Branch Management District. Retrieved on December 8, 2009. Cybersoft Technologies has its headquarters in an unincorporated area." Contact Us ." Cybersoft Technologies. Retrieved on March 27, 2011. "Cybersoft Technologies, Inc. 4422 FM 1960 West, Suite No. 300 Houston, TX 77068-3411" In 2012, Noble Energy announced that it was consolidating its headquarters and two other Greater Houston offices into a 10-story building on the former Compaq headquarters property in unincorporated Harris County." Noble Energy to move HQ to former HP building." Houston Business Journal. January 20, 2012. Retrieved on January 22, 2012. In 2022, ExxonMobil announced it was moving its headquarters to Harris County from Irving, Texas. Goya Foods previously had its Texas offices in an unincorporated area in the county." Contact Us" ( Archive). Goya Foods. April 24, 2011. Retrieved on March 26, 2016. "Goya Foods of Texas 5750 Brittmoore Road Houston, TX 77041"
General Electric operates an aeroderivative division facility on Jacintoport in unincorporated Harris County." GE Energy to provide LM2500+ Gas turbine for south african power plant." General Electric. February 23, 2006. Retrieved on April 24, 2009." Medical Centers U.S." General Electric. Retrieved on April 24, 2009. Randall's Food Markets, a subsidiary of Safeway Inc., has its distribution center in unincorporated Harris County." Distribution Centers ." Safeway Inc. 2. Retrieved on May 13, 2010.
In 2008, KBR announced that it will open a new office facility in an unincorporated area in western Harris County." KBR Announces Plan for West Houston Campus Location ." KBR. May 2, 2008. In December KBR said that it would not continue with the plans due to a weakened economy.Sarnoff, Nancy. " Economic crunch undercuts real estate projects." Houston Chronicle. January 3, 2009. Retrieved on January 21, 2009. In January 2009 KBR announced that it will not open the new office facility." KBR scuttles West Houston expansion." Houston Business Journal. Wednesday January 27, 2010. Modified Thursday January 28, 2010. Retrieved on January 28, 2010.
Several serve Harris County communities. Among the 26 districts are: - Text list
On July 1, 2013, the North Forest Independent School District closed and its territory became a part of Houston ISD.Barajas, Erik. " North Forest ISD officially closes today ." KTRK-TV. July 1, 2013. Retrieved on July 1, 2013.
In addition, state-operated charter schools are in the county. Charter schools in unincorporated areas include:
The department of education of the county operates the Highpoint Schools." Highpoint Schools," and Academic & Behavior Centers East and West (ABC-E) and (ABC-E). Harris County Department of Education. Retrieved on July 17, 2011.
Several private institutions of higher learning—ranging from liberal arts colleges to a nationally recognized research university—are located within Harris County. Rice University is one of the leading teaching and research universities of the United States and ranked the nation's 17th best overall university by U.S. News & World Report.
Five community college districts exist with campuses in and around Harris County:
The Houston Community College and Lone Star College systems are within the 10 largest institutions of higher learning in the United States.
In addition, Houston has the Houston Public Library, a city-controlled public library system.
The cities of Baytown, Bellaire, Deer Park, and Pasadena have their own city-controlled libraries.
Harris County also has a constable for each of its eight precincts and hundreds of deputies assigned to each. They mainly serve in a patrol function, established to maintain peace in the county as well as providing security to county buildings such as court houses and district attorney's offices.
ESD's may provide services directly or may contract with an agency or agencies for services. ESD's may overlap one another to ensure both fire and EMS services are provided.
Numerous private and public hospitals operate in Harris County, including institutions in Texas Medical Center and throughout the county, for example the Harris County Psychiatric Center.
Some communities outside of METRO's service area, such as Baytown, Texas, and Channelview, Texas, are served by Harris County Transit.
General aviation airports for fixed-wing aircraft outside of Houston include:
Compare to: - The cemetery is not in the boundaries of the CDP.
County government
Harris County elected officials
County Judge Lina Hidalgo Democratic District Attorney Sean Teare Democratic County Attorney Christian Menefee Democratic District Clerk Marilyn Burgess Democratic County Clerk Teneshia Hudspeth Democratic Tax Assessor-Collector Annette Martinez Democratic Treasurer Carla Wyatt Democratic Sheriff Ed Gonzalez Democratic Commissioner, Precinct 1 Rodney Ellis Democratic Commissioner, Precinct 2 Adrian Garcia Democratic Commissioner, Precinct 3 Tom Ramsey Republican Commissioner, Precinct 4 Lesley Briones Democratic School Trustee, At-Large, Pos. 3 Richard Cantu Democratic School Trustee, At-Large, Pos. 5 Erica Davis Democratic School Trustee, At-Large, Pos. 7 David W. Brown Democratic School Trustee, Pct. 1, Pos. 6 Danyahel "Danny" Norris Democratic School Trustee, Pct. 2, Pos. 1 Amy Hinojosa Democratic School Trustee, Pct. 3, Pos. 4 Andrea Duhon Democratic School Trustee, Pct. 4, Pos. 2 Eric Dick Republican Constable, Precinct 1 Alan Rosen Democratic Constable, Precinct 2 Jerry Garcia Democratic Constable, Precinct 3 Sherman Eagleton Democratic Constable, Precinct 4 Mark Herman Republican Constable, Precinct 5 Terry Allbritton Republican Constable, Precinct 6 Silvia Trevino Democratic Constable, Precinct 7 May Walker Democratic Constable, Precinct 8 Phil Sandlin Republican
Courts
Criminal District Courts
174th District Court Hazel B. Jones Democratic 176th District Court Nikita V. Harmon Democratic 177th District Court Emily Detoto Republican 178th District Court Kelli Johnson Democratic 179th District Court Ana Martinez Democratic 180th District Court Tami Pierce Republican 182nd District Court Danilo Lacayo Democratic 183rd District Court Lance G. Long Republican 184th District Court Katherine N. Thomas Democratic 185th District Court Andrea Beall Democratic 208th District Court Beverly D. Armstrong Democratic 209th District Court Brian E. Warren Democratic 228th District Court Caroline Dozier Republican 230th District Court Chris Morton Democratic 232nd District Court Josh Hill Democratic 248th District Court Hilary Unger Democratic 262nd District Court Lori Chambers Gray Democratic 263rd District Court Melissa M. Morris Democratic 337th District Court Colleen Gaido Democratic 338th District Court Michele Oncken Republican 339th District Court Te'iva J. Bell Democratic 351st District Court Natalia "Nata" Cornelio Democratic 482nd District Court Veronica M. Nelson Democratic 486th District Court Aaron Burdette Republican 487th District Court Stacey Barrow Democratic 488th District Court Matthew Peneguy Republican 495th District Court Lori DeAngelo Republican 496th District Court Dan Simons Republican 497th District Court Peyton Peebles Republican
Juvenile District Courts
313th District Court Natalia Cokinos Oakes Democratic 314th District Court Michelle Moore Democratic 315th District Court Leah Shapiro Democratic
United States Congress
District 2 Dan Crenshaw Republican 2018 Atascosita, Huffman, Humble, Kingwood, Spring District 8 Morgan Luttrell Republican 2022 Parts of Cypress and Katy, Waller District 7 Lizzie Fletcher Democratic 2018 West Houston, Memorial Villages, Bellaire, West University Place, west and northwest areas of county District 9 Al Green Democratic 2004 Alief, Southwest Houston, Houston's Southside District 18 Vacant Democratic Vacant Downtown Houston, Bush IAH, northwest and northeast Houston, inner portions of Houston's Southside District 22 Troy Nehls Republican 2020 Ellington Field, Katy District 29 Sylvia Garcia Democratic 2018 Aldine, Channelview, East Houston, Fall Creek portion of Humble, Galena Park, Jacinto City, northern Pasadena, North Shore, western Sheldon, South Houston District 36 Brian Babin Republican 2014 Clear Lake City, NASA Johnson Space Center, southern and central Pasadena, Deer Park, Baytown, Crosby, La Porte, eastern Sheldon, Dayton, Seabrook, Morgan's Point, Shore Acres, El Lago, Nassau Bay, Taylor Lake Village District 38 Wesley Hunt Republican 2022 Jersey Village, Cypress, Tomball, Katy, and Klein
Texas Legislature
Texas Senate
4 Brandon Creighton Republican 2014 Kingwood, far eastern portions of Baytown 6 Carol Alvarado Democratic 2013 Houston Ship Channel, eastern portions of Houston, Jacinto City, Galena Park, northern Pasadena, western portion of Baytown 7 Paul Bettencourt Republican 2014 Memorial Villages, Memorial/Spring Branch area, Addicks Reservoir, northwest portions of county 11 Mayes Middleton Republican 2022 Southeast 13 Borris Miles Democratic 2016 Downtown Houston, Texas Medical Center, southwest and northeast Houston, Houston's Southside 15 Molly Cook Democratic 2024 Northwest Houston, Bush IAH, southern portion of Humble, eastern Harris County 17 Joan Huffman Republican 2008 Meyerland, Bellaire, West University Place, much of Greater Katy area, far west Houston, Barker Reservoir
Texas House of Representatives
126 Sam Harless Republican 2018 Champions/FM 1960 area 127 Charles Cunningham Republican 2022 Humble, Kingwood, Lake Houston, Atascocita, Crosby, Wallisville 128 Briscoe Cain Republican 2016 Baytown, Deer Park, La Porte 129 Dennis Paul Republican 2014 Clear Lake City, NASA Johnson Space Center, Southeast Harris County (including Seabrook and Webster) 130 Tom Oliverson Republican 2016 Northwest Harris County (including Cypress, Tomball, Waller) 131 Alma Allen Democratic 2004 far Southwest Houston and far South Side 132 Mike Schofield Republican 2020 West Harris County (including Greater Katy area) 133 Mano DeAyala Republican 2022 West Houston along West Sam Houston Tollway, including western portion of Memorial/Spring Branch and part of the Energy Corridor 134 Ann Johnson Democratic 2020 Inner western portions of Houston (including Meyerland, River Oaks and Memorial Park), Texas Medical Center, West University Place, Bellaire, Southside Place, Western Montrose 135 Jon Rosenthal Democratic 2018 Jersey Village and southeastern segments of the Champions/FM 1960 area 137 Gene Wu Democratic 2013 Southwest Houston (including Sharpstown and Gulfton) 138 Dwayne Bohac Republican 2002 Northwest Houston and parts of the Memorial/Spring Branch area north of I-10, Addicks Reservoir 139 Jarvis Johnson Democratic 2016 North Houston and Aldine west of I-45 140 Armando Walle Democratic 2008 North Houston and Aldine east of I-45 141 Senfronia Thompson Democratic 1972 Northeast Houston, Bush IAH, Greenspoint, southern portion of Humble 142 Harold Dutton, Jr. Democratic 1984 East Houston and Northshore area 143 Ana Hernandez Luna Democratic 2006 East Houston within Loop 610, Houston Ship Channel, Galena Park, Jacinto City, northern Pasadena 144 Mary Ann Perez Democratic 2016 Southern Pasadena, far southeast Houston 145 Christina Morales Democratic 2019 Inner southeastern portions of Houston (mainly east of I-45), South Houston (not part of the city of Houston) 146 Lauren Ashley Simmons Democratic 2024 Inner portions of Houston's South Side 147 Jolanda Jones Democratic 2022 Downtown Houston, inner southeastern portions of Houston (mainly west of I-45), Eastern Montrose, Midtown, Third Ward 148 Penny Shaw Democratic 2020 North and Northwest Houston mainly within Loop 610 (including Houston Heights) 149 Hubert Vo Democratic 2004 Far west Houston, Alief, unincorporated portions of Katy area east of Fry Rd, Barker Reservoir 150 Valoree Swanson Republican 2016 North Harris County (including Spring and Klein)
County services
State government
Law enforcement
there are over 60 law enforcement agencies operating in the county. They include: the Harris County Sheriff's Office, the Harris County Constable Office, the Houston Police Department, METRO Police Department, other municipal police departments, and school district police departments."Appendix A: Overview of Law Enforcement Agencies." ''[https://kinder.rice.edu/sites/g/files/bxs1676/f/documents/KI%202018%20Research%20Report-Law%20Enforcement%20online%20version%204_0.pdf Collaborations and Overlapping Services in Harris County Law Enforcement] ''. [[Rice University]] Kinder Institute for Urban Research, September 2018. Retrieved on September 11, 2018. p. .
Administration by judiciary
Economy
Education
Primary and secondary schools
Colleges and universities
Public libraries
Emergency services
Police services
Municipal fire/EMS services
Emergency services districts
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Hospital services
Transportation
Public Transportation and Transit Services
Transportation Trends
Major highways
Mass transit
Intercity buses
Airports
See also
External links
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