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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — California's regional stay-at-home orders will go into effect in San Diego County on Sunday after the Southern California region fell below the 15% ICU threshold that triggers the restrictions.The state Department of Public Health announced the Southern California region, which includes San Diego, Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, Imperial, Inyo, Mono, San Bernardino, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, and Ventura counties, fell to 13.1% ICU capacity on Friday. That number dropped to 12.5% on Saturday.The restrictions will begin for a region at 11:59 p.m. on Sunday, according to the state. The region will be allowed to exit the order and return to previous reopening restrictions on Dec. 28 if ICU capacity projections for the following month are above or equal to 15%.RELATED: San Diego hospitals react to Newsom’s regional stay-at-home orderUnder the regional stay-at-home order, restrictions will last for three weeks and ban gatherings of people from different households. Several businesses will also be forced to close, including:indoor and outdoor playgrounds;indoor recreational facilities;hair salons and barbershops;personal care services;museums, zoos, and aquariums;movie theaters;wineries, bars, breweries, and distilleries;family entertainment centers;cardrooms and satellite wagering;limited services;live audience sports; andamusement parks.Schools with a waiver, "critical infrastructure," retail stores at 20% capacity, and restaurants offering takeout and delivery service can stay open. Hotels can also remain open "for critical infrastructure support only," and churches would be limited to outdoor services. Businesses have 48 hours to comply with the new health order.RELATED: Gov. Newsom: New California stay-at-home order triggered by ICU capacityOn Friday, San Diego County reported a record 2,039 new cases of COVID-19, and seven additional deaths, bringing the local tally to 88,181 cases and 1,047 deaths. The county has 791 coronavirus-related hospitalizations, 216 of those in the ICU, according to Friday's data. San Diego County's ICU capacity sat at 23%. Over the last 30 days, county health officials said there has been a 178% increase in COVID-19 hospitalizations and a 121% increase in COVID-19 ICU cases.San Joaquin Valley also fell below the state's threshold on Friday, with 14.1% ICU capacity, according to CDPH:Bay Area: 21.2%Greater Sacramento Region: 21.4%Northern California: 20.9%San Joaquin Valley: 14.1%Southern California: 13.1%Multiple Bay Area counties have already started the latest health order. The new restrictions come after Governor Gavin Newsom said he was pulling an "emergency brake" on Thursday to stop the spread of coronavirus.San Diego County Supervisor Jim Desmond responded with the following statement Saturday: 2811
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - California Governor Gavin Newsom signed a State of Emergency Proclamation Friday clearing the way for firefighters to jump on projects meant to protect communities.Newsom said we're seeing larger and more dangerous wildfires than ever before and as a state we need to change our approach."Our world is changing, the wets are getting a lot wetter, the hots hotter and the dry, drier," he said.Alpine shared in the devastation last year; the West Fire leveled neighborhoods and left dozens homeless.CalFire Director Michael Mohler said ten crews across the state will be activated under the proclamation to clear brush and conduct controlled burns. They will also work with 110 members of the National Guard.The proclamation focuses on vulnerable communities. CalFire's Priority Fuel Reduction Project List includes two communities in San Diego County, Guatay and Crest. "Some of them have gone through some kind of environmental review," Director of the Sierra Club, Katheryn Phillips said.The U.S. Forest Service plans prescribed burns a year in advance to account for the environmental processes."We already know the areas of concern and we know how the fire is going to react to those areas, so we have a lot of biologists come in, a lot of fire experts come in and determine which areas are good for burning," Public Affairs Officer for Cleveland National Forest Olivia Walker said.Under the proclamation, environmental regulations are suspended, concerning environmentalists."If it's a butterfly mating season and it's an endangered species, it's not going to be the proper time to burn," Walker said."Could an unintended consequence be a mudslide?" Phillips added.Mohler said there's nothing to worry about, saying the proclamation solely streamlines the paperwork. He said they will absolutely bring in biologists, environmental scientists and archeologists before lighting prescribed burns."The good news is the governor is engaged in this issue I think the issue of how we deal with some of the impacts of climate change; this is just the beginning of a very long conversation," Phillips said. 2128

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Construction crews have started on about 4.5 miles of bikeways and safety improvements stretching from downtown to Hillcrest.The projects include separated and buffered bikeways on Fourth and Fifth Avenues, safety improvements such as lighting, upgraded landscaping, and improved crosswalks for people with disabilities and pedestrians.In all, the project will cost .2 million and cross from B St. in downtown, through Bankers Hill, and to Washington St. in Hillcrest."This project will make it safer and easier for people to walk and bike along commonly traveled streets to visit local businesses and reach destinations such as Downtown San Diego, Balboa Park, and Hillcrest," said SANDAG Vice Chair and Encinitas Mayor Catherine Blakespear. "San Diegans are walking and biking more during the pandemic and this project will provide safe and convenient options for people to continue to choose active transportation, even when the health crisis is far behind us."The new bikeways are part of the Uptown Bikeways effort proposed in 2012, meant to connect Uptown, Old Town, Mission Valley, Downtown San Diego, North Park, and Balboa Park. SANDAG says community members worried about the potential loss of parking due to the project worked with officials to find solutions, and ultimately were able to provide a surplus of parking.The agency adds that it has modified construction schedules to best minimize its impact on businesses currently using temporary outdoor setups to operate under coronavirus restrictions along Fourth and Fifth Avenues.Construction on the project is expected to be finished in 2022. During construction, nearby residents and businesses can expect intermittent lane closures, parking restrictions, construction noise, and dust. Most work will be completed Monday through Friday, holidays excluded, between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m., and occasionally on Saturdays. 1910
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Bea Pesenti recently moved back to Italy after living in San Diego for more than a decade, now she and her fiance are quarantined in their apartment."I do worry about if this continues, how can we afford to live? How anyone can afford to live if you're not working," Pesenti asked.For the last two weeks she has been unable to work or leave her home, unless it's to get groceries.RELATED: FDA approves San Diego company's new coronavirus test-kit"We’ve been on lock down since March ninth," she said. "The issue that I’m starting to feel is there’s no light at the end of the tunnel."Italy's death toll has risen to more than 4,000. Pesenti said every hour she would hear ambulance sirens driving by her home, a painful reminder of the devastation caused by the coronavirus."Had we done things differently, maybe we would be looking at that end of the tunnel," she said. "As a person from Milan, I could have never imagined a city like this being shut down like that."RELATED: Nurses plead for help during coronavirus pandemicPesenti believe if they had social distancing and orders to stay home earlier, things may have been different."We didn't have any examples," she explained. "Now there are examples out there of what you can do that is right and what you shouldn’t do."She's urging loved ones in San Diego to take any public health orders seriously.RELATED: What's the difference? Cold vs. flu vs. coronavirus symptoms"I worry a lot about where San Diego is headed, where the United States, and where so many other countries are headed," she said. "It’s a huge temporary sacrifice for a lot of us, whether its losing our job, not seeing family, but it will only get us out of it sooner."The U.S. State Department issued a level four travel advisory Thursday, asking American citizens to avoid traveling internationally or immediately return to the U.S. if they are already overseas, or possibly prepare to remain abroad for an indefinite amount of time.Pensti said she and her fiance already planned to stay in Italy. RELATED: San Diego COVID-19 trackerThey are clinging on to hope that their lives may return to normal, and they will be able to celebrate their wedding in September and his graduation in December.For now, she leaves San Diegans with this message, "Just act responsibly, take this seriously, stay home, it's a small sacrifice but it's the only way." 2400
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- Authorities are investigating after an inmate died at the George Bailey Detention Facility. According to the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department, deputies were notified that an inmate identified as 63-year-old Dennis Lee Curry needed medical help inside his cell on May 11. Deputies say when they arrived, Curry complained of pain to his head and chest, but had no visible injuries. Curry was taken to a local hospital where his condition worsened and he was placed on life support before he died on the morning of May 13. Following an autopsy, it was discovered that Curry died of natural causes. The Sheriff’s Department’s homicide unit was called in to investigate, as they do with all in-custody deaths. Curry was in custody for outstanding warrants related to prior DUI and drug-related charges, according to the department. 860
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