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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — California's DMV is reopening another 46 field offices this week to fulfill appointments for services that require an in-person visitThursday, six field offices in the county will reopen to customers who have already made an appointment that requires an in-person visit. The offices will be open Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., an open at 9 a.m. on Wednesdays. Those local offices include Chula Vista, El Cajon, Poway, Clairemont, San Ysidro, and Temecula (Riverside County).RELATED: Some California DMV offices reopen for appointments requiring in-person visitsOffices in Hillcrest and San Marcos reopened earlier this month, though confusion over eligible customers led to long lines and frustration.The reopen offices will help those with an appointment for services covering: Paying registration for a vehicle impounded because of registration-related issuesReinstating a suspended or revoked driver licenseApplying for a reduced-fee or no-fee identification cardProcessing commercial driver license transactionsApplying for a disabled person parking placardsAdding an ambulance certificate or firefighter endorsement to a driver licenseVerifying a transit training document to drive a transit bus.Processing DMV Express customers for REAL ID transactions, if time and space allowThe DMV is still encouraging anyone who is eligible to complete their services online to do so through the agency's website.DMV officials said employees will maintain proper social distancing as they serve customers. 1540
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - Border agents have seen a huge drop in traffic along the San Diego Sector ports of entry since the Trump Administration restricted all non-essential travel at the U.S.-Mexico border last Friday.In a conference call with reporters on Monday morning, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) revealed new details about its plan to handle the implications of the restrictions on the migrant population and the cross-border worker population. Recent tweets posted by CBP showed empty ports of entry. “We have seen about a 70% decrease on average at all our ports of entry,” said a CBP spokesperson during Monday’s conference call. That plunge in foot and vehicle traffic comes after the border restrictions took effect on Saturday.CBP said Monday that the restrictions don't apply to U.S. citizens, legal permanent residents or those traveling for medical, work or educational purposes.The agency reports that people’s work verification or documentation is currently on a sort of “honor system”. “At this point in time, we are not formally asking for verification or employment ID,” said a spokesperson on Monday.A spokesperson also reaffirmed that most apprehended migrants will be returned immediately, adding in part, “Individuals are no longer being held in detention areas.Quick interviews will be conducted in the field. Basic biographic scans run in the field as well. Then the individual will be [taken] back to the border and expelled to the country they came from.”There's now at least a 48-hour suspension on migrants crossing for court hearings, said a CBP spokesperson, who added that all new asylum seekers will be reviewed independently. “We're taking each case, case by case, depending on what the claim is, the nationality and the country from which they come from,” he added.“I'm particularly concerned about the asylum migrancy [population],” said Rafael Fernández de Castro, a U.S.-Mexico relations expert at UC San Diego. “In the shelters in Tijuana, sometimes there's 15, 20 [or even] 40 people sleeping in a room. That's basically a horrible story because that's a way to get a lot of migrants contaminated with coronavirus,” he added in his interview with 10News. CBP also reported that it’s making sure its officers have the necessary personal protective equipment like masks and gloves. 2335

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Carlsbad leaders this week approved nearly 0,000 to construct a new trail planned to loop around the city's strawberry fields.Carlsbad City Council voted to add the Hub Park trail to the city's Capital Improvement Program, a 2.4-mile trail on the south shore of the Agua Hedionda Lagoon in an area dubbed "Hub Park."Hub Park sits on land owned by SDG&E. The city has a lease agreement with SDG&E for a portion of the trail, but not the portion that would connect to nearby roads.RELATED: San Diego County park rangers recommend these trails in 2019The city voted to take 4,500 from the General Capital Construction Fund to fund building the eight-foot wide trail.The trail would lead from a new Interstate 5 bridge to a bluff within the leased property that overlooks the lagoon, the city says. It would then loop around the strawberry fields and open space and connect to the south side of Cannon Road via existing underpasses.The trail may include picnic tables and outlook points, in addition to trail signs, dog stations, and recycling and trash bins.RELATED: Trail to Bay challenge offers 3 guided hikes for 1 cleanupHub Park trail is included in the trails master plan adopted by the City Council on Aug. 28, 2019. Under the trails plan, about 67 miles of Carlsbad's current trails would be expanded to more than 100 miles.Carlsbad will next seek out an agreement with SDG&E for public access from Cannon Rd. to the Hub Park property. A design team will have to conduct an environmental review of the proposed trail as well. It could be another three years before the project sees any construction begin. 1655
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - County animal shelters are helping San Diegans "fall in love" for free this season.San Diego County Animal Services (SDDAC) will waive adoption fees for cats at their three shelters this weekend, Friday, Sept. 22 through Sunday, Sept. 24, as part of their "Fall in Love" event.RELATED: Adoption fees lowered as San Diego shelter makes more room for hurricane-impacted animalsCats have been spayed or neutered, have their current vaccinations and flea control, are microchipped, and come with a free veterinary exam in the first 10 days, according to SDDAC.The county's three shelters are open from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Tuesday to Sunday; Adoptions close at 4:30 p.m.RELATED: 'Hurricane Harvey' dogs flown to San Diego from Louisiana up for adoptionAnyone can stop in prior to the promotion to check out cats in person or visit animals service's website to see available cats.The county's three shelters are located at: 967
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - As coronavirus cases climb, a cancer patient faces an excruciating choice: Risk the trips to San Diego for potentially life-saving treatment or not.He was the picture of health, but in 2014 at the age of 45, Bryce Olson was diagnosed with an aggressive, stage 4 prostate cancer."I couldn't believe it. No family history of prostate cancer. Exercised every day," said Olson.Various treatments have kept his cancer at bay, but eventually, it began to grow again. About 10 months ago, the Oregon man began a clinical trial at Moores Cancer Center at UCSD, including IV immunotherapy treatment."Pretty ecstatic ... I've had pretty good success on it, kept the cancer contained," said Olson.As part of the trial, he must fly in to San Diego for treatment every three weeks, a trip suddenly fraught with risk. "Uber to the airport. Being in the airport. Being in an airplane. Getting an Uber to the hospital in San Diego ... makes me super anxious. Makes me feel like I'm a sitting duck," said Olson.Six years of cancer drugs have left son's immune system compromised."Here's the irony. I may die of cancer in the mid term or long term, but I will probably die of COVID-19 if I get it," said Olson.Olson recently made the painful decision to postpone his cancer treatments in San Diego."If I can get through this crisis - maybe miss some of my therapy - maybe I let the tiger a little out of the cage a little bit on the cancer thing. I feel like I could maybe reel that guy back in, but if I die of COVID-19, it's over," said Olson.His decision is one many others with weakened immune systems are also facing, whether to make that trip to a hospital for treatment."Folks like me are faced with Sophie's choice. We either go in and get the treatment that will extend our lives ... But by doing so, we could catch a disease that could kill us today," said Olson.There are some hoops to go through, but his San Diego doctors may be able to get him his infusion at an Oregon hospital. Even if that happens, he's not sure he'd go, because of all the same concerns. 2081
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