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GM to recall 7M vehicles globally to replace Takata air bags

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General Motors will recall about 7 million big pickup trucks and SUVs worldwide to replace potentially dangerous Takata airbag inflators

The announcement came Monday after the U.S. government told the automaker it had to recall 6 million of the vehicles in the U.S.

GM says it will not fight the decision, even though it believes the vehicles are safe. It will cost the company an estimated $1.2 billion, about one-third of its net income so far this year.

The automaker had petitioned the agency four times since 2016 to avoid recalls, contending the airbag inflator canisters have been safe on the road and in testing. But the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration on Monday denied the petitions, saying the inflators still run the risk of exploding.

Owners complained to the NHTSA that the company was placing profits over safety.

Exploding Takata inflators caused the largest series of auto recalls in U.S. history, with at least 63 million inflators recalled. The U.S. government says that as of September, more than 11.1 million had not been fixed. About 100 million inflators have been recalled worldwide.

Takata used volatile ammonium nitrate to create a small explosion to fill airbags in a crash. But the chemical can deteriorate when exposed to heat and humidity, and they can explode with too much pressure, blowing apart a metal canister and spewing shrapnel.

Twenty-seven people have been killed worldwide by the exploding inflators, including 18 in the U.S.

Monday’s decision by NHTSA is a major step in drawing the Takata saga to a close. It means that all Takata ammonium nitrate inflators in the U.S. will be recalled, NHTSA said. Earlier this year the agency decided against a recall of inflators with a moisture-absorbing chemical called a desiccant. NHTSA said it would monitor those inflators and take action if problems arise.

GM will recall full-size pickup trucks and SUVs from the 2007 through 2014 model years, including the Chevrolet Silverado 1500, 2500, and 3500 pickups. The Silverado is GM’s top-selling vehicle and the second-best-selling vehicle in the U.S. Also covered are the Chevrolet Suburban, Tahoe and Avalanche, the Cadillac Escalade, GMC Sierra 1500, 2500 and 3500, and the GMC Yukon.

NHTSA said in a prepared statement that it analyzed all available data on the airbags, including engineering and statistical analyses, aging tests and field data.

“Based on this information and information provided to the petition’s public docket, NHTSA concluded that the GM inflators in question are at risk of the same type of explosion after long-term exposure to high heat and humidity as other recalled Takata inflators,” the agency said.

The company has 30 days to give NHTSA a proposed schedule for notifying vehicle owners and starting the recall, the statement said.

GM said that although it believes a recall isn’t warranted based on the factual and scientific records, it will abide by NHTSA’s decision.

Spokesman Dan Flores said Monday that none of the inflators have blown apart in the field or in laboratory testing. But he said GM wants to avoid a drawn-out fight with the government.

“Although we are confident that the inflators in the GMT900 vehicles do not pose an unreasonable risk to safety, continue to perform as designed in the field and will continue to perform as designed in line with the results of our accelerated aging studies, we will abide by NHTSA’s decision to maintain the trust and confidence of customers and regulators,” he said in an email.

In a 2019 petition to NHTSA, GM said the inflators were designed to their specifications and are safe, with no explosions even though nearly 67,000 airbags have deployed in the field. The inflators, it said, have larger vents and steel end caps to make them stronger.

But Takata declared the GM front passenger inflators defective under a 2015 agreement with the government.

In its petition, GM said that Northrop Grumman tested 4,270 inflators by artificially exposing them to added humidity and temperature cycling, and there were no explosions or abnormal deployments.

However, NHTSA hired airbag chemical expert Harold Blomquist, who holds 25 airbag patents, to review the data, and he concluded that the GM airbags were similar to other Takata inflators that had exploded.

Test results for the GM inflators included abnormally high-pressure events “indicative of potential future rupture risk,” NHTSA said in documents. “These findings illustrate that GM’s inflators have a similar, if not identical, degradation continuum” to other Takata inflators that have exploded, the agency wrote.

Flores said GM already has purchased 1.6 million replacement inflators made by ZF-TRW that do not use ammonium nitrate.

Jason Levine, executive director of the nonprofit Center for Auto Safety, which opposed GM’s petitions to avoid recalls, said it’s a good day for millions of GM owners who had to wait four years for a decision on “whether they are driving with an unexploded hand grenade in their steering wheel.”

Shares of GM rose 4.5% in Monday afternoon trading to $44.96, its highest point in over a year.

The company said the recalls will be phased in based on replacement inflator availability and will cost $400 million this year.

Drivers can check to see if their vehicles have been recalled by going to https://www.nhtsa.gov/recalls and keying in their 17-digit vehicle identification number.

The previous Takata recalls drove the Japanese company into bankruptcy and brought criminal charges against the company. Eventually, it was purchased by a Chinese-owned auto parts supplier.

Winners and losers from Patriots’ devastating loss to Texans in Week 11

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The New England Patriots seemed to be past the mental blockage that had plagued their season. Prior to Week 9, the Patriots couldn’t win close games. Then in Weeks 9 and 10, New England briefly established its offensive identity while improving the defense just enough to win games.

And then in Week 11, it all came undone. The lowly Houston Texans beat the Patriots, 27-20, at NRG Stadium on Sunday. Cam Newton and the Patriots couldn’t execute a game-winning drive in the final moments. Though the Patriots’ briefly flirted with fighting for playoff contention, they are essentially out of the mix in the AFC.

New England had a shot to tie the game, with Newton leading a drive into the Texans’ half of the field with a minute left to play. But he faced pressure on a fourth down and couldn’t get a throw off. The turnover on downs essentially ended the game. Here are the winners and losers from the matchup.

He couldn’t have played this deep ball (in the video below) from Newton much better. Byrd was streaking downfield and shielded the defensive back from making a play. For the first time all season, Byrd played the field-stretching role that New England seemingly signed him to play.

It was his first touchdown of the season — and Newton’s first touchdown to a Patriots receiver. Byrd finished with six catches for 132 yards and the touchdown. He added 11 yards on one carry.

It probably helped Byrd that Jakobi Meyers had a few good games, which meant that Byrd didn’t get quite so much defensive attention. But this was also simply a matter of Byrd doing a good job getting open and making really good contested catches. This was the best football he’s played in 2020 — and maybe in his entire career.

BECKY G GANA EL AMERICAN MUSIC AWARD 2020 A LA ARTISTA LATINA FEMENINA FAVORITA

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BECKY G GANA EL
AMERICAN MUSIC AWARD 2020
 A LA
ARTISTA LATINA FEMENINA FAVORITA

Los Angeles, CA (23 de noviembre de 2020). La superestrella global Becky G, fue premiada anoche con el primer premio a la Artista Latina Femenina Favorita en los American Music Awards, durante la 48ª edición de la entrega de estos premios, que fueron transmitidos en vivo por la cadena ABC desde el Teatro Microsoft; obteniendo este reconocimiento, tan sólo una semana después de haber ganado el premio E! People’s Choice Award a El/La Artista Latina del 2020. 

Becky aceptó su premio AMA con un poderoso y conmovedor discurso, que dedicó especialmente a los inmigrantes. “¡Esto es una locura!”, expresó Becky G. “Cuando firmé (con mi discográfica) por primera vez a los 14 años, hice un ‘cover’ en el cual dije: ‘Todo comenzó cuando mi abuelo cruzó (la frontera), un día seré la que haga ese cruce (crossover).’ Es increíble, porque hoy en día, sigo teniendo el mismo sentimiento, excepto que ya no tengo que hacer el crossover porque nosotros somos el crossover. Y cuando se trata de mí y de las decisiones que tomo en mi carrera, ondeo con orgullo las dos banderas, la mexicana y la americana…como muchos, muchos hijos y nietos de inmigrantes, sin importar de dónde sean, hemos aprendido de los que nos han precedido lo que es el sacrificio y el trabajo duro…Dedico este premio a todos los trabajadores inmigrantes en esta pandemia. Es por mis abuelitos que hoy estoy parada aquí.”

Para ver su discurso completo de click AQUÍ.

Que Onda Magazine disponible en todas las Taquerias Arandas

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Thanksgiving could be a massive superspreader event

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Dr. Laura Forman, chief of emergency medicine at Rhode Island’s Kent Hospital, told that the coronavirus pandemic has pushed the state “to the brink.”

“Our ICU beds are nearly full in the state, our emergency departments are full, our hospitals are rapidly filling up,” Forman said. “We’re concerned Thanksgiving could be a massive superspreader event and push us out of the hospitals and into our field hospitals here.”

The positivity rate in Rhode Island is now at 5.9%, according to the state’s Department of Health. The cases, in turn, are quickly turning to hospitalizations. ICU beds are almost full, with 87% occupied statewide. In a Wednesday evening interview on “The News with Shepard Smith,” Forman explained that what she’s seeing in her state now, is unlike anything she has seen in her over 20 years of practicing medicine in the United States.

“Our cases are increasing so rapidly here, we literally today are making plans to put refrigerated trucks for morgue space outside of our hospitals and field hospitals,” Forman said. “This is unlike something we’ve seen in this country before. I’m worried about it.”

The virus is at a dire point across the country, topping more than a quarter-million deaths and killing more than 1,700 Americans on Tuesday, according to a CNBC analysis of Johns Hopkins data. It was the deadliest day in six months. Hospitalizations hit more than 76,000, another all-time high according to the  Covid Tracking Project.

Forman told host Shepard Smith that the toll the pandemic is taking on healthcare workers is tremendous, and that despite PPE, they’re still getting sick with Covid-19.

“One of our biggest concerns is that we will have too many staff out sick and be unable to staff some of our hospitals in the near future,” Forman said.

Dr. Bruce Becker, adjunct professor of behavioral medicine and social science at Brown University’s School of Public Health, echoed Forman’s concerns.

“Very few health care workers that I know, mostly emergency health care workers, have managed to stay healthy in spite of taking care of many Covid patients,” Becker said.

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

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

  • HCC – Northeast Campus, 555 Community College Drive, self nasal swab, (Closed Thanksgiving Day.) and
  • HCC – South Campus, 1990 Airport Blvd., self oral swab, (Closed Thanksgiving Day.)

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:

  • Plaza Americas Mall, 7500 Bellaire Blvd.,
  • Houston Community College – Southeast, 6815 Rustic, and
  • UMMC Tidwell, 510 W. Tidwell Rd.

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:

  • Memorial Park Running Trails Center, 7575 N. Picnic Lane; (self oral swab)
  • Kroger, 1801 S. Voss Rd, (self oral swab) and
  • Kroger, 9303 S. Highway 6, (self oral swab).

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.

Information obtained through testing, treatment or services will not be used against immigrants in their public charge evaluation.

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