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Millions of Americans expected to travel for Thanksgiving despite CDC warning

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Millions of Americans are expected to travel for the holiday this week despite the CDC’s warning to stay home this Thanksgiving.

The TSA said more than two million people were screened at U.S. airports this past weekend despite the CDC’s warning against traveling for the holiday.

Still, AAA is projecting less than 50-million Americans will travel for Thanksgiving. That represents at least a 10 percent drop from last year, which would be the largest one-year drop since the 2008 recession.

In New England, 2.24 million are expected to travel and of those, about 155,000 are expected to travel by air. That’s a 47-percent drop from air travel last year.

Many airlines have emphasized what they’re doing to stay safe like sanitizing gates and kiosks and trying to shorten lines and gatherings as well as purify the air.

Most airlines won’t pay cash to refund a flight, but many are waiving fees and offering vouchers.

The Maine CDC says we’ve got to update our understanding of the pandemic in our current environment and remain vigilant this holiday season.

“The world is so much different than what it was just a year ago. Holiday safety means something much different this year than it did last year. Everything has changed,” said Maine CDC Director Dr. Nirav Shah.

If you are flying for the holiday, in addition to following CDC guidelines, AAA recommends checking your destination and any hotels or car rentals for specific safety protocols.

Even if you take precautions when flying, Dr. Anthony Fauci said over the weekend he’s worried that Thanksgiving crowds at airports this week could lead to another surge in coronavirus cases.

“As we’re getting into the colder season, particularly the situation with the holiday season where you see people traveling, you see the clips on TV, people at airports — I mean, those are the things that we’ve got to realize are going to get us in even more trouble than we’re in right now,” said Dr. Fauci.

Dr. Fauci said new COVID-19 cases from Thanksgiving won’t become evident until weeks later, making it “very difficult” as we head into December.

Mayor Celebrates Native American Heritage Month By Announcing The Launch Of The Virtual Southern Plains Museum & Cultural Center In Houston

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Mayor Sylvester Turner announced today the launch of The Southern Plains Museum and Cultural Center (SPMCC). The SPMCC is the first virtual Native American Indian museum and cultural center in Houston.

The Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs awarded a $10,000 City of Houston initiative grant to the project.

“Earlier this year, City Council voted to recognize the second Monday in October as Indigenous Peoples’ Day. Houstonians can now celebrate Native American Heritage Month by learning about indigenous histories through the Southern Plains Museum and Cultural Center,” said Mayor Sylvester Turner. “With the coronavirus pandemic still spreading in our community, this virtual experience will allow families to learn about Indigenous Peoples from the comfort and safety of their own home.”

According to the 2010 Census, Houston and its surrounding area have about 68,000 Native Americans from all Nations. Founder, curator, and president of the Southern Apache Museum Chance L. Landry (Lipan Apache) opened the museum’s doors in 2012 to educate the general public. During its lifetime, the Southern Apache Museum became a community and cultural center and resided at the Northwest Mall until it closed its doors in 2017.

The virtual cultural center includes a Southern Apache Museum, American Indian Genocide Museum, Library, Garden, Health Clinic, and Powwow Arena. Nations such as the Alabama Coushatta, Choctaw, Comanche, Cherokee, Lipan Apache, Navajo, Ponca, Tunica Biloxi, Muskogee Creek, and Aztec are represented. Visitors can learn about indigenous nations through renderings of art, artifacts, and videos of public ceremonies as they traverse a virtual space.

Ms. Landry hopes that this virtual space will shape the future of a physical indigenous cultural center in Houston.

“Mayor Sylvester Turner will go down in history as the Mayor who finally recognized the Indigenous community in Houston, and the Native American Indian community will always remain grateful for the recognition,” said Chance Landry, founder of the Southern Apache Museum. “Our Mayor will lead us out of the shadows into the scope of visibility in this great city of ours.”

Ms. Landry worked with INVI LLC, a Virtual Architecture firm established in March of 2020 that has been recognized for creating the renowned #ArtforJustice Virtual Museum. “We are very honored for the opportunity to participate in this amazing project,” said Giangtien Nguyen and Afreen Ali, co-founders of INVI. “We have learned so much about the stories and history of Native Americans since working with Chance Landry and the Native American community. We hope that through the virtual platform, their voices can reach many people globally.”

Immersive Installation by Anri Sala

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Immersive Installation by Anri Sala
in the Buffalo Bayou Park Cistern

March 12 – December 12, 2021

Houston, TX – November 19, 2020 – Buffalo Bayou Partnership is pleased to announce a newly commissioned artwork for the Buffalo Bayou Park Cistern by the internationally renowned multi-media artist, Anri Sala.  This immersive new film and sound installation, titled Time No Longer, will occupy the Cistern for a period of nine months, transporting visitors into an other-worldly environment within this vast, subterranean reservoir.

Time No Longer will incorporate film projected onto a translucent, 22 by 150-foot (7 by 45-meter) screen with a soundtrack emanating throughout the space, its reverberations creating ripples on the surface of the water. Visitors will encounter the work in 360 degrees by making their way around the full perimeter of the 87,500-square-foot Cistern, hearing, feeling, and watching it through the Cistern’s 221 supporting columns.

The film depicts a weathered turntable floating in a space station. It is tethered only by its electric cord, which allows it to keep playing a vinyl record. There appears to be no human presence to listen to it, and an uneasy quiescence around it suggests it may be spinning in the aftermath of a catastrophe – a custodian of that absent humanity. With its own acrobatic intelligence, the tonearm moves from place to place on the record, the needle’s touch and rise resuming and ceasing its music. In a manner that seems not entirely at the mercies of gravity or chance, it continuously conducts itself. From its position in space, it observes 16 earthly sunrises and sunsets each day.

The turntable plays a new arrangement of French composer Olivier Messiaen’s Quartet for the End of Time that draws on the unique history of the quartet’s composition. During the Second World War, Messiaen (1908–1992) was captured at Verdun and incarcerated at a prisoner-of-war camp in Germany. While imprisoned he wrote Quartet for the End of Time, premiering it in 1941 – with three fellow musician prisoners – to an audience of captives and guards. Scored only for instruments they could each play and find, this extraordinary piece of chamber music remains the most searingly haunting and memorable work composed through incarceration. Sala recognized in Messiaen’s elegiac piece not only a sense of overwhelming loneliness at a time when the world’s crises seemed insurmountable, but also the need to bring something – however fragile and soft-spoken – into that numbness. For Time No Longer, Sala was particularly drawn to the only solo movement of the quartet, ‘The Abyss of the Birds’, which was written for clarinet and played by Messiaen’s fellow prisoner of war, Algerian musician Henri Akoka. As Messiaen put it, “The abyss is Time with its sadness, its weariness. The birds [clarinet] are the opposite to Time; they are our desire for light…”

Sala found a natural complement to this isolated clarinet in another remarkable musical event, the story of Ronald McNair’s saxophone. In 1986 McNair, one of the world’s first Black astronauts to have reached space, was also a professional saxophone player who had planned to play and record a saxophone solo on board the Space Shuttle Challenger. This would have been the first original piece of music recorded in space had not that journey been suddenly and tragically curtailed; the spacecraft disintegrated seconds after take-off, killing everyone on board. Sala felt that composing a saxophone part for ‘The Abyss of the Birds’ would subtly re-envisage a piece that was never played where it was intended, and also form a duet between two instrumental voices – empathetic and interdependent through what they have endured. The saxophone is introduced in Time No Longer only when the needle leaves the vinyl, granting McNair a ghostly presence, refracted into space via Akoka’s clarinet. The powerful acoustics of the cavernous Cistern also indicate the vastness and loneliness of what connects McNair and Akoka, respectively outer space and incarceration.

“We are in awe of what Anri Sala has created for the Cistern and cannot wait to share this poetic project with the public,” said Karen Farber, Buffalo Bayou Partnership’s Vice President of External Affairs. “From the moment he saw the space, Sala was taken with it, and he has created an artwork that truly responds to both the Cistern’s uniqueness, and the story of the City of Houston. We are so fortunate to play host to this exciting work.”

Houston provides an appropriate setting for Time No Longer, Sala’s most ambitious project to date. It is both the origin and fulcrum of two endeavors at the extent of our vertical frontiers: one boring deep into the earth to extract its riches, another venturing upwards into improbable space exploration. For nine months, the Cistern’s underground chamber will become the dwelling place for a symbiosis steeped in suffering, but never bound by it.

The sound arrangement for Time No Longer is made in partnership with two of Sala’s long-term collaborators, Hungarian-American musician André Vida, and French sound designer Olivier Goinard. The saxophone is performed by Vida himself, while the clarinet is performed by French clarinetist Raphaël Sévère. Time No Longer is curated in collaboration with Weingarten Art Group.

This project is organized by Buffalo Bayou Partnership with lead underwriting provided by Suzanne Deal Booth Cultural Trust, John R. Eckel, Jr. Foundation, and Marian Goodman Gallery.  Free Thursdays at the Cistern sponsored by KBR. Major support provided by Radoff Family Foundation, Scott and Judy Nyquist, and [N.A!] Project, with additional support from Weingarten Art Group.  Buffalo Bayou Partnership is funded in part by the City of Houston through Houston Arts Alliance.  (as of November 19, 2020)

METRO Thanksgiving Schedule

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Thanksgiving

In observance of the Thanksgiving holiday, METRO will operate the following schedule:

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 25, 2020

  • Local bus routes will operate regular weekday schedules.
  • Park & Ride routes will operate regular p.m. service. Check your route’s schedule for the correct times.
  • HOV/HOT lanes will be open inbound from 5-10 a.m. and outbound from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.
  • METRORail service will operate regular weekday schedules.
  • METRORapid service will operate a regular weekday schedule.

THURSDAY, NOV. 26, 2020 (THANKSGIVING DAY)

  • Local bus routes will operate on a Sunday schedule.
  • Park & Ride routes WILL NOT operate on this day.
  • HOV/HOT lanes WILL NOT be open on this day.
  • METRORail service will operate Sunday schedules.
  • METRORapid will operate on a Sunday schedule.

FRIDAY, NOV. 27, 2020

  • Local bus routes will operate on a Sunday schedule.
  • Park & Ride routes WILL NOT operate on this day.
  • HOV/HOT lanes WILL NOT be open on this day.
  • METRORail service will operate Sunday schedules.
  • METRORapid will operate on a Sunday schedule.

SATURDAY, NOV. 28, 2020 and SUNDAY, NOV. 29, 2020

  • Local bus routes will operate regular weekend schedules.
  • Park & Ride routes WILL NOT operate.
  • METRORail service will operate regular weekend schedules.
  • METRORapid will operate on a regular weekend schedule.

METROLIFT HOLIDAY HOURS
METROLift’s Reservations and Customer Service offices will be closed Thursday, Nov. 26, and Friday, Nov. 27. As a reminder, all Thursday and Friday subscription trips will be canceled.

To speak to an agent call Reservations on Wednesday, Nov. 25, at 713-225-6716 to schedule trips for the days listed:

  • Thursday, Nov. 26
  • Friday, Nov. 27
  • Saturday, Nov. 28
  • Sunday, Nov. 29
  • Monday, Nov. 30

After Nov. 25, you may call the METROLift automated phone system, MACS at 713-739-4690. If booking one day in advance, you can also schedule a trip online through MACS-WEB / EZ-Wallet.

All METRO buses and trains are 100% accessible, with routes across the region to serve you. Call 713-635-4000 or 713-635-6993 (TDD), or visit RideMETRO.org for route, bus stop and train information.

CUSTOMER SERVICE CALL CENTER HOURS
Call 713-635-4000 to speak to a Customer Service Representative. Please note our holiday hours:

  • Wednesday, Nov. 25: 8 a.m. – 5 p.m.
  • Thursday, Nov. 26: CLOSED
  • Friday, Nov. 27: 8 a.m. – 5 p.m.

RIDESTORE AND LOST & FOUND HOURS
Holiday hours are as follows:

  • Wednesday, Nov. 25: 8 a.m. – 5 p.m.
  • Thursday, Nov. 26: (Thanksgiving Day) CLOSED
  • Friday, Nov. 27: CLOSED
  • Saturday, Nov. 29: CLOSED
  • Sunday, Nov. 30: CLOSED

US coronavirus hospitalizations, new cases break record for second straight day

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The number of Americans hospitalized with Covid-19 and the number of new US cases reported rose to record levels for a second day in a row on Friday.

More than 82,000 people were hospitalized, according to the Covid Tracking Project, topping Thursday’s record. More than 193,000 new cases were reported, according to Johns Hopkins University data — the first time US cases have topped 190,000 in a day.

Over half of the country is now in the “red zone,” Dr. Deborah Birx, a White House Coronavirus Task Force member told CNN Chief Medical Correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta in an exclusive interview, warning that this surge was unlike those in the past.

“When you look at what’s happening now, the rate of rise is dramatically different,” Birx said. “This is faster. It’s broader. And what worries me, it could be longer.”

As of Friday, the US was averaging 74,063 current hospitalizations over the last 7 days — up 19.13% compared to the previous week.

More than 2,000 American deaths were recorded by Johns Hopkins University on Thursday — the highest number since early May. And by December 18, more than 2,300 Americans could be losing their lives daily, according to the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME).

The group now predicts a total of 471,000 American deaths by March 1 — up more than 30,000 since their last projection about a week ago.

But amid the dire warnings are reassurances from experts that Americans merely need to wear masks, social distance and avoid social gatherings for a little while longer.

“It’s not forever. Good vaccines are coming, extraordinarily effective vaccines,” said Dr. Peter Hotez, dean of tropical medicine at the Baylor College of Medicine.

“So we’re going to have a much better place, definitely by this time next year, or even earlier — spring or summer,” he said. “Therefore, it’s your obligation to keep yourself and your family alive.”

“It’s all hands on deck,” he said.

In a White House Coronavirus Task Force briefing Thursday, Dr. Anthony Fauci urged Americans to “double down” on lifesaving measures as the nation waits for a vaccine to be approved.

Fauci highlighted preliminary data from both Moderna and Pfizer that showed their vaccine candidates were about 95% effective, calling the results “extraordinary.” But that doesn’t mean the country can let up on wearing masks, avoiding gatherings and social distancing.

“We need to actually double down on the public health measures as we are waiting for that help to come, which will be soon,” Fauci said. “If we do that, we’ll be able to hold things off until the vaccine comes.”

Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech submitted to the US Food and Drug Administration on Friday for an emergency use authorization (EUA) for their vaccine candidate, the first to seek regulatory approval in the US.

An EUA is not a full approval, but allows products to be used under particular circumstances before all the evidence is available for approval.

“This is a historic day, a historic day for science and for all of us,” Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said in a video shared on Friday.

The FDA said Friday it had scheduled a meeting of its outside advisory panel, the Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee, to discuss the application for an EUA on December 10.

In a statement, FDA Commissioner Dr. Stephen Hahn acknowledged that “transparency and dialogue are critical for the public to have confidence in Covid-19 vaccines,” and went on to offer assurances that the evaluation would be “open and transparent as possible.”

While the application is “encouraging,” the Infectious Diseases Society of America stressed a transparent review of Pfizer’s data is still needed, including “evidence that the vaccine has been studied in diverse populations.”

Based on current projections, Pfizer expects to produce up to 50 million vaccine doses this year and up to 1.3 billion doses in 2021.

Fauci has said he expects the first vaccinations to begin “toward the latter part of December,” and logistic preparations are already underway.

Gen. Gustave Perna, the chief operating officer of Operation Warp Speed, said Thursday there were 100 million vaccine kits ready to go if and when distribution of a vaccine begins.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said in a recorded video statement released Thursday that his state has purchased 5 million needles, 5 million syringes and 5 million alcohol swabs to prepare for the distribution of the vaccine. The governor called recent breakthroughs “the greatest rays of hope that we have seen since the pandemic began.”

Dr. Troy Brennan, CVS Health’s executive vice president and chief medical officer, said his company is also preparing for the massive rollout of vaccines. While he expects CVS will have vaccines on hand by mid-December, the company is focused on coordinating with Operation Warp Speed to get them to nursing homes and assisted living facilities first.

Brennan said he expects CVS stores across the country to start offering Covid-19 vaccines by the end of February or the beginning or March.

In an open letter on Thursday, the American Medical Association, the American Hospital Association and the American Nurses Association asked the public to scale back on traditional gatherings to help curb the spread of the virus.

“The record-shattering surge underway is resulting in uncontrolled community spread and infection that has already overburdened health systems in some areas and will ultimately consume capacity of our health care system and may reduce the availability of care in many places in our country,” they said.

The exploding number of cases also prompted the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to update their Thanksgiving travel guidelines, recommending Americans not travel for the holiday. Those who travel should wear masks, keep their distance from others and wash their hands regularly.

In the past week, similar messages have been echoed both by leading health experts and state leaders.

Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards warned that if residents were planning on a Thanksgiving that looks like previous ones, “You’re making a mistake.” In Utah, where hospitals are overwhelmed and about 45 ICU beds remain vacant, the governor advised that only people from the same household gather for the holiday.

Wearing masks could save lives. According to the IHME team, 65,000 lives could be saved by March 1 if 95% of Americans wore masks.

More curfews, measures to curb the spread

Massachusetts added Maine and New Hampshire to a list of states subject to travel restrictions. When arriving in Massachusetts, travelers must fill out a form, quarantine for 14 days or receive a negative Covid-19 test administered in the three days prior, according to the Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency. As of Friday, only Vermont and Hawaii did not appear on the list of restricted states.

In California, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Thursday a limited Stay-at-Home order will be going into effect Saturday for the counties that are in the state’s most restrictive tier. That includes Los Angeles County, San Diego County, Riverside County, Orange County and Sacramento County.

About 94% of California’s population is currently in the most restrictive tier.

Nonessential work and gatherings must stop between 10 p.m. and 5 a.m., the governor said, adding the order will remain in effect for one month.

A statewide curfew is now in effect for 21 days from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. in Ohio, where Gov. Mike DeWine clarified police won’t be out pulling people over if they see them driving at night, saying it should be assumed they have a “legitimate reason to be out.”

“But on the other hand, if there is a number of people congregating somewhere, and the police see that … certainly they’re probably going to pull over and say, ‘Hey, it’s beyond the 10 o’clock, you guys need to go home.’”

In Arkansas, the governor announced an 11 p.m. closure for all businesses that are licensed to sell and allow consumption of alcohol on premises.

The new directive goes into effect Friday and will last until January 3, the governor’s office said, adding that it covers restaurants and bars as well as private clubs with “on premise” permits.

And there could be more restrictions just over the horizon. In New York City, where public schools transitioned to remote learning on Thursday, Mayor Bill de Blasio warned the city could move into the “orange zone” as soon as the week after Thanksgiving, closing indoor dining and gyms, according to state guidelines.

Las tradiciones navideñas de San Antonio despiertan esperanza y alegría gracias al encendido anticipado de las luces en River Walk

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Las tradiciones navideñas de San Antonio despiertan esperanza y alegría gracias al encendido anticipado de las luces en River Walk

SAN ANTONIO, 20 de noviembre de 2020 – Una nueva experiencia de cuatro millones de luces, con luminarias mexicanas a lo largo de River Walk y millones de luces nocturnas por toda la ciudad, son solo algunas de las alegres decoraciones del árbol navideño de San Antonio para este 2020. El bellamente decorado Travis Park del centro de la ciudad será la sede del árbol de navidad H-E-B, una pícea azul de 50 pies, y celebraciones con distanciamiento social recibirán a los visitantes que buscan una luz inspiradora durante la época festiva en San Antonio.

La esperanza navideña abunda en San Antonio, con cálidas atracciones que entusiasman a toda la familia. La temporada comienza la semana del 16 de noviembre, cuando River Walk de San Antonio se enciende por completo antes de lo habitual para traer la magia navideña a este año sin precedentes. Los tres primeros fines de semana de diciembre, la Fiesta de las Luminarias Ford regresa con más de 2000 luminarias a lo largo de las orillas de River Walk, mientras cantantes de Ford Holiday Boat Caroling se desplazan sobre embarcaciones a lo largo del río.

Por toda la ciudad, los visitantes encontrarán diferentes maneras de adentrarse en el espíritu navideño mientras disfrutan del cálido clima invernal de la ciudad:

Por primera vez, illumi-Night: A Magical Drive-thru Experience llenará el campo de los San Antonio Spurs con más de cuatro millones de luces centelleantes, junto a escenarios para fotografías, deliciosos dulces, exposiciones 3D y mucho más a lo largo de una experiencia de una milla para transitar en automóvil. El evento colaborará con los programas de Spurs Give, enfocados en la comunidad.

Para invitar a una tierra de fantasía salvaje invernal, las San Antonio Zoo’s Whataburger Zoo Lights contarán con montajes lumínicos espectaculares inspirados en los animales, incluida una jirafa luminosa de 15 pies de alto. Los entusiastas de los espectáculos de luces disfrutarán de un show con un toque de inspiración latina en el Lakeside Light Show, que contará con tecnología de píxeles combinada con una banda sonora especialmente recopilada que reproducirá únicamente música latina. Los invitados pueden beber cocoa, tomar fotografías de globos de nieve, asar malvaviscos, montar camellos y hacer muchas cosas más.

Millones de luces centelleantes en Six Flags Fiesta Texas preparan el escenario para el evento anual del parque Holiday in the Park, donde las emocionantes atracciones se combinan con espectáculos musicales y visitas con distanciamiento social a Santa y a personajes de los Looney Toons.

Los visitantes encontrarán la exposición de luces navideñas más grande de Texas en la SeaWorld San Antonio’s Christmas Celebration, donde las brillantes luces crean una atmósfera mágica a lo largo de 250 acres. El espectáculo de Elmo’s Christmas Wish ofrece una oportunidad para bailar y cantar junto a amigos peludos mientras mariachis navideños aportan al parque un sonido auténtico de San Antonio.

Las Natural Bridge Caverns son el único lugar para encontrar a “Santa Claus de las cavernas” y villancicos que hacen eco dentro de una cueva situada a 180 pies bajo el suelo. Las festividades de Christmas at the Caverns también incluyen un Trail of Lights exterior de un tercio de milla, un laberinto navideño al aire libre, fogatas de navidad y entretenimiento en vivo en un entorno seguro.

La prioridad sobre la seguridad de la comunidad y los visitantes es una de las razones por las que San Antonio es uno de los mejores destinos navideños. Las comunidades cívica, empresarial y de asociaciones de San Antonio unieron fuerzas para asegurar que la ciudad mantenga la seguridad como el aspecto más importante mientras se recupera de la crisis causada por la COVID-19. Además, más de 2100 comercios locales han asumido el compromiso Greater. Safer. Para saber más sobre por qué San Antonio es una opción de viaje más segura, visite VisitSanAntonio.com/SaferSA.

Houston Health Department, partners announce free COVID-19 testing schedule for the week of November 23

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Houston Health Department, partners announce free COVID-19 testing schedule for the week of November 23

The Houston Health Department and its agency partners are announcing the schedule for sites offering free COVID-19 tests the week of November 23, 2020. The week will offer 17 free testing sites across Houston.

Houston Health Department
The Houston Health Department will offer testing (nasal swab by healthcare professional) at HCC – North Forest, 6010 Little York Rd., The site will open 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Wednesday and Saturday. (Closed Thanksgiving Day and Friday.)

Appointments are available at doineedacovid19test.com. On-site registration is also available.

The department also offers free drive-thru testing (self nasal swab) at the Aramco Services Company, 9009 W. Loop South. The mega testing site will open Monday, Wednesday and Saturday from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. and Tuesday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. It remains open until reaching daily capacity of 1,000 tests.  (Closed Thanksgiving Day and Friday.)

People wanting to get tested at the Aramco site can call the department’s COVID-19 Call Center at 832-393-4220 between 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. to receive an access code.

The department will offer testing at three community sites. The sites don’t require appointments and remain open until each reaches its daily capacity of 250 tests. The sites and their hours of operation are:

  • Denver Harbor Multi-Service Center, 6402 Market Street; Mon. – Wed. 10 a.m.- 6 p.m. and Sat. 10 a.m. – 3 p.m.,  (Closed Thanksgiving Day and Friday.), drive thru and walk up, (self nasal swab)
  • Higher Dimension Church, 9800 Club Creek Dr.; Mon. – Wed. 10 a.m.- 6 p.m. and Sat. 10 a.m. – 3 p.m.,  (Closed Thanksgiving Day and Friday.), drive thru only, (self nasal swab) and
  • Kingwood Community Center, 4102 Rustic Woods Dr.; Mon. – Wed. 10 a.m.- 6 p.m. and Sat. 10 a.m. – 3 p.m.,  (Closed Thanksgiving Day and Friday.), drive thru only, (self nasal swab).

The department will provide (self nasal swab) testing at the METRO Addicks Park & Ride, 14230 Katy Freeway, and the Multicultural Center, 951 Tristar Drive, city of Webster. Appointments are available by calling the department’s call center at 832-393-4220.  (Closed Thanksgiving Day, Friday and Saturday.)

Texas Division of Emergency Management
Texas Division of Emergency Management (TDEM) and the Houston Astros offer free COVID-19 tests (self oral swab) daily at Minute Maid Park (Lot C), 2208 Preston. The testing site’s capacity is 1,200 tests per day.

The site features evening hours twice a week, eight drive-thru testing lanes and four walk-up testing lanes. It opens 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday through Wednesday and from 12 p.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday and Friday. Spanish-speaking staff is available on-site.  (Closed Thanksgiving Day.)

Visit texas.curativeinc.com to set an appointment or obtain more information. On-site registration is also available.

TDEM and the department will also operate drive-thru testing sites Monday through Saturday at:

Appointments are required, available at texas.curativeinc.com.

TDEM and the department offer weekday drive thru testing (nasal swab by healthcare professional) at LeRoy Crump Stadium, 12321 Alief Clodine Rd.  (Closed Thanksgiving Day, Friday and Saturday.) Appointments are required, available by visiting covidtest.tdem.texas.gov.

United Memorial Medical Center
United Memorial Medical Center (UMMC) will offer weekday testing (nasal swab by healthcare professional) at drive-thru test sites at:

The sites don’t require appointments and offer testing from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. or until reaching daily capacity of 300 tests.  (Closed Thanksgiving Day and Friday.)

People needing information about UMMC test sites can call 1-866-333-COVID or visit ummcscreening.com.

Curative
Curative will provide daily walk up tests at three locations, each with a 900 daily test capacity:

Appointments are available at texas.curativeinc.com. (Closed Thanksgiving Day.)

Federally Qualified Health Centers
The health department is providing test kits, lab access and equipment to local Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHC) so they can expand their COVID-19 testing capacity. The centers and phone numbers people can call to set up testing appointments are:

  • HOPE Clinic, 713-773-0803
  • Spring Branch Community Health Center, 713-462-6565
  • El Centro de Corazon, 713-660-1880
  • Avenue 360 Health and Wellness, 713-426-0027
  • Lone Star Circle of Care at the University of Houston, 346-348-1200, and
  • Scarsdale Family Health Center, 281-824-1480.

FQHC patients pay what they can afford, based on income and family size, and are not denied services due to inability to pay or lack of insurance.

The department and its agency partners may shift locations and schedules of test sites to better meet community needs. Houstonians can visit HoustonEmergency.org/covid19 for current Houston testing sites and information about stopping the spread of the virus.

Houston-area schools see surge in failing students as COVID wreaks havoc on grades

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Students across Greater Houston failed classes at unprecendented rates in the first marking period, with some districts reporting nearly half of their middle and high schoolers received at least two F grades because they routinely missed classes or neglected assignments.

The percentage of students failing at least one class has doubled, tripled or even quadrupled in several of the region’s largest school districts, education administrators reported in recent days, a reflection of the massive upheaval caused by the novel coronavirus pandemic.

If those trends keep up, districts expect to see a decline in graduation rates, an increase in summer school demand and a need for intensive support to accommodate students falling behind, among numerous other consequences.

“Our internal failure rates — not (standardized) tests, just our teachers teaching, grading, assessing kids — are like nothing I’ve ever seen before,” said Alief ISD Superintendent HD Chambers, who reported nearly half of his students failed at least one class to start the school year.

“I’ve told our teachers to use the same professional judgment you’ve always used, but I don’t want our standards lowered. We’re not creating these false narratives that you’re doing OK and let someone move on without being competent in the area we’re teaching.”

The failure rates illustrate the monumental challenge faced by students, families and school districts trying to navigate the pandemic while remaining engaged in learning.

Across the region, slightly more than half of students have returned to campuses for in-person classes, though families and educators report that children are spending far more time on computers while in the classroom. The remaining students remain at home in online-only classes, where many are easily distracted and are less accountable to teachers.

So far, early returns are raising alarms, particularly in districts with the highest-need students.

In Houston ISD, the state’s largest district, Interim Superintendent Grenita Lathan said 42 percent of students failed two or more classes in the first marking period, up from about 11 percent in a typical year. Unlike many other Houston-area districts, HISD only held online classes during its initial six-week grading period.

Officials in Cy-Fair ISD, the region’s second-largest district, reported 41 percent of online-only middle and high school students failed at least one class, compared to 15 percent of those attending in-person instruction.

In Aldine ISD, one of the region’s biggest and highest-poverty districts, nearly half of freshmen, sophomores and juniors failed at least two classes, triple the previous year. Meanwhile, about 25 percent of middle school students received at least two F grades, about five times higher than 2019-2020.

To the north, Spring ISD reported its share of middle and high school students failing at least one course doubled from the previous year, rising to 35 percent.

“Kids know what they need to do in order to be counted present and pass some of their courses,” HISD Interim Superintendent Grenita Lathan said. “But lack of engagement is the major concern.”

While students continue to connect with teachers via Zoom and download coursework, parents and other family members have not been nearly as successful as teachers in ensuring assignments gets done.

Alonzo Reynolds III, the third-year principal of Spring’s Dekaney High School, said many working parents leave older children home alone during the school day. When they return, some parents do not double-check their work in the evening or know how to access the district’s learning platforms.

“(Parents) might monitor if you’re logging in, but not if you’re doing that assignment,” Reynolds said. “That accountability piece isn’t there.”

Erik Williams, the father of an 18-year-old junior taking online-only courses at Dekaney High, said he has struggled to monitor his son’s progress while also working as a security officer from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. each weekday.

Since the start of online classes in August, Williams regularly has received messages from school officials telling him his son, Chandler, did not complete his online coursework or never logged into class. Williams hoped Chandler would catch up on his credits and graduate in the spring, but those prospects dwindle with each absence.

“It’s a huge worry,” Williams said on a recent Saturday, when Spring administrators visited his second-floor apartment to re-engage with Chandler. “He wasn’t where he was supposed to be coming into this year, so this really didn’t help him. With the way I work, I can’t be there standing over his shoulder all day. He’s going to have to motivate himself.”

The challenge of keeping online students engaged also has re-engineered the job facing teachers, who now spend more time connecting with kids and families at the expense of delivering instruction.

Carmen Burch, a chemistry teacher at Aldine’s Eisenhower High School, said she spends much of her 10-hour workday trying to connect with parents and guardians of students who are not logging in to online classes. She estimated about 20 of her 200 students were failing because they are skipping virtual instruction.

“I have one parent who has changed cell phone numbers at least six times, and it’s not even the end of the semester,” Burch said. “That’s the biggest headache I have. Half the numbers don’t work and half the parents don’t have a legit email.”

At the same time, students attending classes on-campus also are falling behind more than normal, district leaders reported.

Spring Superintendent Rodney Watson said teachers continue to struggle with juggling their online and in-person responsibilities, making it harder to provide high-quality classroom instruction. While many districts reported lower failure rates among students attending virtual classes, Spring saw 30 percent of in-person students receive at least one F grade while 25 percent of online-only students failed one or more classes.

“For some (teachers), they’re feeling like their day never ends,” Watson said. “It goes all day and all into the evening, just to start over the next day.”

If failure rates remain high, however, the impact could be long-lasting for students and districts.

Educators fear the pandemic will widen graduation and college acceptance disparities between children from lower-income and higher-income families. Districts in less affluent areas of Houston generally saw more students remain in online classes, where failing grades were more prevalent.

“We’re going to have to be mapping things out for how to use every minute of remediation, thinking about a two- to three-year span for getting kids back on course,” Aldine Chief Academic Officer Todd Davis said.

Districts could add summer school courses in the coming years to help students make up for failing grades, but the cost of those programs already worries some school leaders. Texas legislators and education officials have not pledged to allocate additional funding for summer school ahead of next year’s legislative session.

“Those extra courses that students normally take — for us, it’s called ‘credit recovery’ — that we pay for now, we would have to start charging for services,” Lathan said. “I know some school districts do it now, but based on our district, it’s hard to charge.”

Chambers, the Alief ISD superintendent, said high failure rates also could upend staffing schedules in some schools, requiring more sessions of courses that students must pass to graduate.

“We’re going to have to probably double staff algebra classes and all those freshman courses, because we’re going to have twice as many kids that failed or didn’t complete the course,” Chambers said.

In recognition of struggles in virtual learning, Texas Education Commissioner Mike Morath decided last month to allow public school districts to force their failing online students back into the classroom, with some exceptions.

At least one Houston-area district, Angleton ISD, announced it will employ this option starting in its second semester. However, other districts have been reluctant to order students to attend in-person classes as COVID-19 cases rise.

After Spring administrators left their apartment, Chandler and Erik Williams said they hope to return to Dekaney in the coming weeks, where Chandler can better connect with teachers.

“I definitely know what I want to do: It’s go back to school,” Chandler Williams said. “Staying home, doing the online work, it just isn’t working.”

 

Texas Reports Record 12,293 New Coronavirus Cases

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Texas reported a single-day high of 12,293 new cases of the coronavirus, setting the record 10,824 set just two days earlier. Health district officials also reported 230 new deaths, bringing the cumulative number of fatalities to 20,113 since the onset of illness.

The data are recorded on a statistical dashboard maintained by the Texas Department of State Health Services. According to the dashboard, there are 147,030 active coronavirus cases across the state.

The new daily high of cases came as Gov. Greg Abbott traveled to Lubbock, Texas, to provide an update on the distribution of bamlanivimab, the Eli Lilly & Company monoclonal antibody therapy for COVID-19. The Texas Department of State Health Services has allocated an initial shipment of bamlanivimab to acute care hospitals across Texas with additional doses expected to be shipped each week, Abbott said.

“Every day, the Lone Star State is closer to turning the corner of this pandemic thanks to medical advancements like bamlanivimab,” Abbott said. “This therapy drug will help prevent hospitalizations and reduce the strain on our healthcare system and workers. However, as encouraging as these advancements are, there is still no substitute for personal responsibility. The State urges all Texans to continue to wear a mask, social distance, and wash your hands, especially as we head into the holiday season.”

Health officials described bamlanivimab as a drug designed for outpatients with mild to moderate COVID-19 who are 12 years or older and at higher risk of severe disease. The drug, officials added, has been shown to prevent hospitalizations in some patients when used before they become very sick. Officials added that the initial allocation is phase one and focused on hospitals while phase two may be broader and include other facilities such as nursing homes and infusion centers.

Gov. Greg Abbott traveled to Lubbock, Texas, to talk about the antibody therapy bamlanivimab as Texas achieved a new all-time high of 12,293 new cases of the coronavirus. Photo provided by the Texas governor’s office.

Hospitals that were allocated doses should have received or will be receiving calls about their allocations over the next few days from AmerisourceBergen, the same distributor as remdesivir, officials said. Hospitals can accept or decline their allocation, officials noted, and declined doses will be reallocated to other Texas hospitals.

Despite the soaring rates of illness, Abbott has vowed not to issue a shelter-in-place order to blunt the further spread of illness.

According to the state’s dashboard, the 20 counties with the greatest number of cumulative coronavirus cases are:

  • Harris County: 177,466.
  • Dallas County: 111,960.
  • El Paso County: 77,977.
  • Tarrant County: 76,140.
  • Bexar County: 59,220.
  • Hidalgo County: 38,687.
  • Travis County: 35,326.
  • Lubbock County: 27,105.
  • Cameron County: 25,308.
  • Collin County: 22,337.
  • Fort Bend County: 18,972.
  • Webb County: 18,109.
  • Denton County: 17,553.
  • Nueces County: 16,876.
  • Montgomery County: 14,331.
  • Galveston County: 13,827.
  • Brazoria County: 13,516.
  • McLennan County: 12,761.
  • Williamson County: 11,184.
  • Potter County: 11,052.

The 25 counties with the most number of fatalities to date are:

  • Harris County: 2,943.
  • Hidalgo County: 1,788.
  • Bexar County: 1,465.
  • Dallas County: 1,429.
  • Cameron County: 1,001.
  • Tarrant County: 968.
  • El Paso County: 876.
  • Travis County: 464.
  • Nueces County: 421.
  • Webb County: 366.
  • Fort Bend County: 324.
  • Lubbock County: 284.
  • Collin County: 229.
  • Montgomery County: 201.
  • Denton County: 199.
  • Brazoria County: 193.
  • Starr County: 187.
  • Smith County: 181.
  • Galveston County: 177.
  • Jefferson County: 172.
  • McLennan County: 170.
  • Maverick County: 169.
  • Williamson County: 161.
  • Val Verde County: 137.
  • Potter County: 128.

To see the full range of data related to coronavirus spread in Texas — including the counties with the most cumulative case totals and deaths — visit the Texas Department of State Health Services dashboard.

Publicación 1184 de DALLAS – Revista Digital 19 de noviembre – 25 de noviembre / 2020

Gracias por SEGUIRNOS, este artículo contiene la revista digital de DALLAS de ¡Que Onda Magazine! De fecha 19 de noviembre al 25 de noviembre del 2020.