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Everything Regent Hernandez said at a Governor’s Small Business Summit in Weslaco

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Content provided by Mario Muñoz. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Mario Muñoz or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

WESLACO, Texas - Robots were on the mind of businessman Mike Hernandez last week.

The Texas A&M University System regent had two public speaking roles and on both occasions he mentioned robotics.

One of his speeches was given at the Port of Brownsville. Hernandez was on the bill when Gov. Greg Abbott and Texas A&M Chancellor John Sharp announced plans to build a $30 million advanced manufacturing trading center.

The other speech was made in Weslaco, when Hernandez gave the keynote address at a Governor’s Small Business Summit.
Weslaco speech

Hernandez also mentioned Texas A&M’s advanced manufacturing training facility in his speech in Weslaco. Even though it is being located at the Port of Brownsville, it has big implications for the Mid and Upper Valley, Hernandez argued.

“Texas A&M has a big project going on in the Port of Brownsville. What we're building there is a huge workforce training center for advanced manufacturing and other skills that are needed for the industries that are going to be coming.

“But beyond that we also have an area to do R&D, research and development and innovation for the companies that are coming into the Port. And why is that important to Weslaco, what is going on at the Port of Brownsville? The future of the Mid and Upper Valley is basically getting into the mass manufacturing business.”

Before, Hernandez said, “it was all about maquilas and people utilizing cheap labor on the other side of the border to assemble things and put them together.”

But, things are changing, Hernandez argued.

“The future of manufacturing and really most businesses… is that things are going to be made by robots, not by humans. Humans aren't going to be putting stuff together. So, what's going to be most important are having people that can work on these robots when they go down because when a robot goes down for a company we're talking about thousands and thousands of dollars in losses, every minute that robot is down.”

Hernandez continued: “The reason I'm saying this is because the Valley for the last 50 years has been, for lack of a better way of saying it, nothing more than that truck stop. Goods are coming in, the trucks stop here, fill up for gas, buy a hotdog. Same at the Port. Goods come in, ships are unloaded, and reloaded.

“My vision and many other people's vision for the future of the Valley is that, for example, avocados come in and guacamole goes out. The raw materials come in here. We don't just fill up the truck and pass it on the way. We use those materials to make stuff.”

To read the new stories and watch the news videos of the Rio Grande Guardian International News Service go to www.riograndeguardian.com.

  continue reading

909 episodes

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Manage episode 411360803 series 3489987
Content provided by Mario Muñoz. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Mario Muñoz or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

WESLACO, Texas - Robots were on the mind of businessman Mike Hernandez last week.

The Texas A&M University System regent had two public speaking roles and on both occasions he mentioned robotics.

One of his speeches was given at the Port of Brownsville. Hernandez was on the bill when Gov. Greg Abbott and Texas A&M Chancellor John Sharp announced plans to build a $30 million advanced manufacturing trading center.

The other speech was made in Weslaco, when Hernandez gave the keynote address at a Governor’s Small Business Summit.
Weslaco speech

Hernandez also mentioned Texas A&M’s advanced manufacturing training facility in his speech in Weslaco. Even though it is being located at the Port of Brownsville, it has big implications for the Mid and Upper Valley, Hernandez argued.

“Texas A&M has a big project going on in the Port of Brownsville. What we're building there is a huge workforce training center for advanced manufacturing and other skills that are needed for the industries that are going to be coming.

“But beyond that we also have an area to do R&D, research and development and innovation for the companies that are coming into the Port. And why is that important to Weslaco, what is going on at the Port of Brownsville? The future of the Mid and Upper Valley is basically getting into the mass manufacturing business.”

Before, Hernandez said, “it was all about maquilas and people utilizing cheap labor on the other side of the border to assemble things and put them together.”

But, things are changing, Hernandez argued.

“The future of manufacturing and really most businesses… is that things are going to be made by robots, not by humans. Humans aren't going to be putting stuff together. So, what's going to be most important are having people that can work on these robots when they go down because when a robot goes down for a company we're talking about thousands and thousands of dollars in losses, every minute that robot is down.”

Hernandez continued: “The reason I'm saying this is because the Valley for the last 50 years has been, for lack of a better way of saying it, nothing more than that truck stop. Goods are coming in, the trucks stop here, fill up for gas, buy a hotdog. Same at the Port. Goods come in, ships are unloaded, and reloaded.

“My vision and many other people's vision for the future of the Valley is that, for example, avocados come in and guacamole goes out. The raw materials come in here. We don't just fill up the truck and pass it on the way. We use those materials to make stuff.”

To read the new stories and watch the news videos of the Rio Grande Guardian International News Service go to www.riograndeguardian.com.

  continue reading

909 episodes

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