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    Coronavirus response

    Dallas-area group matches healthcare workers with RVs for isolation amid coronavirus

    Stephanie Allmon Merry
    Mar 27, 2020 | 10:49 am

    Healthcare workers from Sacramento to Syracuse are resting easier after a Dallas-area woman’s Facebook post suddenly started a movement.

    On March 23, Emily Phillips formed a Facebook group called RVs 4 MDs to fight the Corona Virus to connect medical professionals who needed to self-isolate with people who had RVs, trailers, or campers to lend. Four days later, the group has reached more than 1,100 members, and about two dozen matches have been made around the country.

    Requests for shelter are pouring in from those on the frontlines of the battle against coronavirus: from an ICU nurse from Plymouth, Minnesota; an emergency-medicine doctor in Lynchburg, Virginia; an ER security guard in the San Gabriel Valley of California.

    Both requests and donations are coming quickly through the Facebook group, and Phillips is working around the clock with a team of 10 administrators to meet the need.

    “We can save thousands from exposure,” she says.

    Personal experience
    Phillips started the group as a way to “pay forward” the same kindness that had been shown to her own family.

    Her husband, Dr. Jason Phillips, is an emergency physician at a Legacy ER, a 24-hour emergency room and urgent care center. They and their three young children — 8-year-old Landon, 5-year-old Ella, and 6-month-old Beau — live in a large house on secluded property in Celina, north of Dallas.

    But as the coronavirus grew more widespread in North Texas, the Phillipses worried about Jason exposing his family to infection. Emily and one of the children have asthma, which puts them at even higher risk.

    “We have a really nice situation here as far as not living near lots of people, and we even have a housekeeper who does a really good job of disinfecting,” she says. “But we don’t know what my husband is bringing into the house. He sees up to 150 patients a day, and it only takes one droplet to contaminate the family.”

    Rent houses and hotel rooms didn’t make sense for their children nor their pocketbook, so her mom suggested parking an RV on their property.

    On March 22, Phillips made a Facebook post seeking a camper her family could borrow. A friend of a friend stepped up. And then a second offer came in.

    Phillips thought she might be able to make some connections, so she created a Facebook group. Donations began streaming in, and matches were made throughout Dallas-Fort Worth, then as far away as Houston, Missouri, and California.

    Just in case
    Daisy Brockman was one of those matches.

    Her husband, Dr. Craig Reece Brockman II, is the director of emergency medicine at Baylor Scott & White Medical Center – Frisco and, as adjunct faculty at UT Southwestern Medical Center, he supervises residents at the Parkland ER department.

    They have three kids, ages 20, 18, and 15, and Daisy takes care of her elderly parents at their nearby home. Her 85-year-old father has dementia.

    Every day, her husband interacts with patients who have tested positive for COVID-19. They’d been preparing since about late January for the pandemic to arrive in North Texas, she says. But they didn’t anticipate a potential shortage of medical workers' personal protection equipment (PPEs) — which could put them at critically high risk for exposure.

    “Reece and I were pushing around ideas on Friday [March 20] about how to isolate him from us with airborne precautions, and our open-plan house doesn’t lend itself to that,” she says.

    Daisy Brockman connected with Emily Phillips through Facebook, and within 16 hours, an RV in Prosper had been offered.

    The Brockmans now have a fully-equipped, 15-foot trailer stored and ready when they need it. They’re working with the city of Frisco on a permit that will allow them to park it in front of their home.

    “Just the weight off my shoulders since the camper arrived, and the weight off Reece’s shoulders, is just amazing,” she says. “Within three hours, I could grab the trailer and get it hooked up and be ready.”

    They’ve already figured out how to install Wi-Fi and they’ll arrange chairs so they can sit outside “together,” 20 feet apart, she says.

    Grass-roots effort
    Brockman is now one of the administrators of the Facebook group, helping Phillips find matches for the many campers that have been offered.

    Both offers and requests come via Facebook posts in the group. Commenters can help offer connections, and group admins work out logistics. Requesters can pick up trailers themselves, or contributors can deliver them. All campers are required to be cleaned and disinfected prior to loaning. Other legal and insurance requirements are required and explained, as well.

    Phillips — who runs a software company but has never organized a philanthropic endeavor like this — says she has no idea how big the group will get or how far it might reach. Her only goal is to set up as many healthcare workers as she can with safe shelter, as quickly as possible.

    “I just care about getting these RVs to the doctors,” she says. “The more people who hear about it, the more chances we get.”

    Dr. Jason Phillips and Dr. Craig Reese Brockman with a donated camper.

    RVs for MDs
    Photo courtesy of Emily Phillips
    Dr. Jason Phillips and Dr. Craig Reese Brockman with a donated camper.
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    closing the gaps

    Texas no longer leads U.S. for racial progress, new report says

    Amber Heckler
    Jan 19, 2026 | 9:15 am
    The Martin Luther King Jr. Community Center in Dallas
    The Martin Luther King Jr. Community Center/Facebook
    WalletHub's report is released annually ahead of MLK Day.

    Texas has been overtaken as the No. 1 state that has made the most racial progress, according to a new study.

    The Lone Star State led the nation in 2025, but now ranks in third place behind Georgia (No. 1) and Mississippi (No. 2). It also ranked No. 5 nationally in the list of states with the most racial integration.

    WalletHub's "States That Have Made the Most Racial Progress" study is released annually ahead of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day. The report compares all 50 states and the District of Columbia across 22 relevant metrics divided into two main rankings: racial integration (which the study defines as "the current integration levels of white people and Black people") and racial progress (defined as "the levels of racial progress achieved over time").

    The report's author clarifies that the study focuses only on the racial integration between Black people and white people "in light of racial tensions in recent years that sparked the Black Lives Matter movement."

    "We released this report ahead of the holiday honoring Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., who played a prominent role in the Civil Rights Movement to end segregation and discrimination against Black people," the report says.

    The study further divided each ranking into four main categories measuring the gaps between white people and Black people over time; spanning employment and wealth, education, social and civic engagement, and health. Texas performed the best in education and health, ranking No. 4 nationally in both categories, and it ranked in sixth place for its social and civic engagement. The state ranked 16th in the category for employment and wealth.

    According to WalletHub, Texas has "done a lot" to reduce gaps in health outcomes for white and Black residents, such as reducing gaps in health insurance coverage, and reducing the share of Black Texans suffering from "poor health" and diabetes. It also notes that Texas "made the second-most progress when it comes to obesity," but it did not acknowledge the racial bias in body mass index (BMI) that has been increasingly flagged in recent years.

    The report further praises Texas for reducing the gap in business ownership between white and Black Texans, and for its improvement in reducing discrimination in the parole system. WalletHub does not offer data behind the parole claim.

    "It’s encouraging to look at the data and see that some states have made significant strides toward racial equality over the past few decades," said WalletHub analyst Chip Lupo regarding the overall report. "This change demonstrates that state-level policies and residents’ attitudes regarding equality have grown considerably better."

    Though racial disparity gaps are closing between white and Black people, racial profiling and discrimination is still a major issue affecting Black people and other people of color across the country.

    In 2023, a senate bill banned public Texas universities from having diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) offices and programs, prompting warnings of discrimination against Black, Hispanic, and other marginalized students, including those with disabilities.

    The top 10 states with the most racial progress in 2026 are:

    • No. 1 – Georgia
    • No. 2 – Mississippi
    • No. 3 – Texas
    • No. 4 – North Carolina
    • No. 5 – Maryland
    • No. 6 – Florida
    • No. 7 – New Jersey
    • No. 8 – Massachusetts
    • No. 9 – Louisiana
    • No. 10 – New Mexico
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