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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- Homes burned overnight Sunday as the Valley Fire raged through the East County, burning thousands of acres and prompting a state of emergency declaration.Video from the scene showed structures and vehicles scorched by the flames. So far, 11 structures have been destroyed by the fire.As of Sunday at 8:47 p.m., the fire has so far scorched 9,850 acres and is 1% contained, Cleveland National Forest says.Evacuation orders have been issued for Barrett Lake Dam, while evacuation warnings have been issued for Lake Marina, Dulzura, Dog Patch, Potrero, Campo, Honey Springs, Barrett Junction, Dearhorn Valley, Corte Madera, Pine Valley, and the area from Lyons/Japatul Valley Rd. to the 8 Freeway.Overnight into Monday, fire crews say the fire is expected to remain active because of the lack of overnight moisture.Structures are being threatened in the Carveacre and Lawson Valley, Wood Valley, Lyons Valley, and Deer Horn Valley. The agency added that power lines that supply a large portion of San Diego County are also threatened.SDG&E says they are working with CalFire to solve any outages due to the fire, but need to wait for approval for their crews to be allowed into the area and to re-energize power lines. The company said there were more than 3,300 customers without power due to the fire.An evacuation center has been set up at Steele Canyon High School at 2440 Campo Road and Joan MacQueen Middle School at 2001 Tavern Road.Joan MacQueen Middle School was briefly closed Sunday as an evacuation center, but has since been reopened.INTERACTIVE MAP: Valley Fire erupts in Japatul Valley areaThe County Animal Services South Shelter is also welcoming evacuated animals. The shelter is located at 5821 Sweetwater Road.The San Diego Humane Society also said Sunday its emergency response team is assisting with animal evacuations. Anyone who needs help evacuating animals is asked to call 619-299-7012. “Remember to evacuate early, take your pets with you, bring food & water,” the organization said.Sunday, Gov. Gavin Newsom declared a state of emergency for San Diego County, in addition to several other counties where wildfires were burning. The declaration will free up federal funds to be used in response to the fires.RELATED STORIESPhotos: Valley Fire erupts in East CountySocial media reaction to Valley FireCheck today's weather forecast in your areaSan Diego County opens cool zones amid heat waveThe fire erupted near Sprint Trail and Japatul Road southeast of Alpine just before 3 p.m. on Saturday. According to the US Forest Service, 374 firefighters are battling the flames on the ground.The Valley Fire also caused air quality to plummet. The County Air Pollution Control District said Sunday that air quality in areas affected by smoke may reach unhealthy levels, compelling the agency to issue a smoke advisory.Additionally, the air quality will be negatively affected by Ozone levels that are expected to be unhealthy for sensitive groups due to the extreme heat, the agency said.“In areas of heavy smoke, assume that air quality levels are unhealthy for sensitive groups to unhealthy for all individuals. In areas with minor smoke impacts, assume that air quality levels range from moderate to unhealthy for sensitive groups,” the organization said.The district advised anyone who smells smoke to limit outdoor activity. 3384
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Hoteliers across San Diego are seeing a significant loss of business from mass cancellations as efforts continue to stop the spread of the novel coronavirus. The San Diego Convention Center Corp. reports five conferences have either been canceled or postponed, meaning upwards of 43,000 people would not be coming to San Diego and spending money locally. "The hotel industry has seen a significant drop in business, a significant impact on the workforce," said Namara Mercer, who chairs the San Diego Hotel Motel Association. "Anecdotally the shifts are being cut, people aren’t going to work if occupancy is not high."LIST: San Diego events, schools that have changed plans due to the coronavirusAs conferences cancel, large convention hotels downtown are finding themselves with hundreds, if not thousands, of unexpected empty rooms. That can be costly also to other hotels. "What do they do? They reduce their rates - the big convention hotels - and then they start taking away business from all of us who are in outlying areas," said Bob Rauch, CEO of RAR Hospitality, which owns three San Diego County hotels and manages nine others.Rauch said cancellations were up 15 percent last week, and he expects that to increase to 25 percent this week. He says he expects it to peak next week at 35 percent before he expects things to calm down. As of now, he has not cut staff hours, but he said things could change if the loss of business continues to persist. "If this worsens over the next couple of weeks, we will create some kind of shared pain program," said Rauch, adding that it would likely involve cutting hours across the board so no employees are laid off. As of December, there were 31,700 people in the county working for hotels, up about 2.6 percent from December 2018, according to the state Employment Development Department. 1868
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — For the first time Tuesday, 12-year-old Kiera Latulippe faced the man who killed her entire family in a drunk driving crash. The Valley Center girl was in the car with her family headed to the Austin, Texas, airport after vacation when the drunk driver hit their car head-on. Her father, Scott; mother, Nancy, and 14-year-old brother, Jackson, all died. Kiera was the only one to survive. On Friday, Guy Brasted was sentenced to 18 years in prison. After the sentencing, Kiera and her uncle and legal guardian, Mark Latulippe, took the stand with an emotional message for Brasted. "It made me miss out on so much, like daddy daughter dances," Kiera said, listing the things she can't do now that her family has been ripped away from her. RELATED: Valley Center remembers family killed in DUI crashOn Tuesday, after the pair returned from the sentencing in Texas, Latulippe told 10News, "it was extremely emotional for her having to look at this again and place herself in that car again." Brasted had a blood alcohol level more than double the legal limit at the time of the crash."My brother, Jackson, and I had something I can never have with someone else, and it kills me to know I will never have that feeling with anyone else. Everyday I think about him," Kiera said.Since the accident happened two years ago, Latulippe has taken his niece into his own care."I can't replace, I'm a fill-in parent for someone who has tragically had everything robbed from her in one moment," Latulippe says.Latulippe is a CHP officer for California Highway Patrol. He says he now shares his story to prevent drunk drivers from getting behind the wheel, not only as an officer but now, as a victim. 1713
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Governor Gavin Newsom’s vaccine safety task force will have to work quickly once the FDA announces a decision on Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine candidate.The 11-member panel, officially called the Scientific Safety Review Workgroup, has been tasked with reviewing the safety and efficacy of vaccine trials and rendering a recommendation on their use in California.The workgroup has a difficult mission: review the data thoroughly enough to offer a recommendation independent from the FDA, but do it fast enough to avoid delaying distribution of the vaccine.Pfizer’s emergency use authorization application spans thousands of pages.The workgroup has already reviewed Pfizer’s early-stage clinical trial data from phases 1 and 2 and found no cause for concern, Governor Gavin Newsom said. They’re still waiting to get their hands on the all-important Phase 3 data, which included thousands of participants.Panel member Dr. Rodney Hood, the president of the Multicultural Health Foundation, acknowledged the task force will have to complete its review of the Phase 3 data “very, very quickly.” Dr. Hood is one of two members from the San Diego region, along with Dr. Mark Sawyer of Rady Children’s Hospital.“We certainly don't want to introduce any unnecessary delay in the vaccine being available to Californians,” Dr. Sawyer said.The FDA has scheduled a meeting of its vaccine advisory committee, known by its acronym VRBPAC (pronounced verb-pack), on Dec. 10. The agency said it will make Pfizer’s Phase 3 data available at least two days before that meeting.At the end of that meeting, a group of about 20 experts on the advisory committee will vote on whether to recommend emergency authorization of the vaccine. The FDA is expected to issue a decision shortly after, although the agency does not have to abide by the advisory committee’s recommendation.“The California committee is on notice to be ready for a meeting either later in the day on the 10th or on December 11,” said Dr. Sawyer.Dr. Sawyer was recently added to VRBPAC, so he will cast a vote on whether to recommend approval of the vaccine at the national level before participating in California’s process.“It is going to take a few days for the vaccine to really start flowing,” he said. “I don't think the [California] committee is going to introduce extra delay.”The California committee has promised to issue its decision within 24 hours of the FDA’s to avoid slowing down distribution, but that means the members may have as few as three days to review the safety and efficacy data.Federal regulators will spend about three weeks reviewing the thousands of pages of data submitted as part of Pfizer’s application. VRBPAC and the California Scientific Safety Review Workgroup will render decisions based on summaries prepared by the FDA, Dr. Sawyer said.Both doctors say they have confidence in the FDA’s process and acknowledge it would be very unlikely for the California workgroup to break with the agency’s recommendation. They said the mission of their review is to add an extra layer of verification after complaints the Trump administration was exercising political pressure on the FDA.“I think the governor foresaw that it was going to be very important that the general community accept these vaccines, assuming they're approved and are safe and effective, because otherwise we're not going to get out of this pandemic,” Dr. Sawyer said.The doctors say they want to make sure that community acceptance extends across all demographics, so they’ll be looking closely at the numbers to see if various ethnic or racial groups had different responses to the vaccine.Based on research on past vaccines, a differential response is not expected, Dr. Hood said. However, COVID-19 does strike Latinos and African-Americans more severely, making vaccine acceptance among minority communities all the more critical.“I want to look at the data, get an assessment of risk-benefit and the question I ask is, would I take it? Number one. Number two, if I would take it, would I recommend it to my family?” he said.The doctors said they will also closely examine reports of side effects.Early data suggests both Pfizer and Moderna’s candidates have somewhat harder-hitting side effects than the typical flu vaccine. Dr. Sawyer compared the side effects to the recent shingles vaccine.“Your arm hurts for a day or two. You may not feel well. You may feel a little bit under the weather for the first 24 hours. You could even have a mild fever or headache,” he said, noting those symptoms typically resolve within 24 to 48 hours based on the data available so far.“That's actually a good sign. You want that to happen,” he added.Those sorts of short-term side effects are signs the body is building a strong immune response. They’re evidence the vaccines work as well as advertised, but the doctors say they won’t know for certain until they review the final numbers. 4949
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Fall is in the air, perfect for Halloween fun and street fair excitement around San Diego.La Jolla Playhouse brings the performance outside during their Without Walls Festival at Liberty Station. Check out live, immersive performances and productions all across the arts district.Borrego Springs celebrates the desert life with the Borrego Days Desert Festival, featuring a parade and fly-over, and festival filled with fun for the whole family.SAN DIEGO HALLOWEEN:San Diego's Whaley House: Tour one of America's most haunted homesFrightful fun: San Diego Halloween, fall events for familiesExperience Halloween chills at these San Diego attractionsSpirited shindigs: Halloween parties for San Diego's 21+ crowdFree haunted hikes, Halloween carnivals at San Diego County parksEscondido and Encinitas are hosting a pair of North County street festivals, where visitors will have their pick of delicious foods, arts and crafts, and can enjoy live music throughout the day.Here's a look some fun around town this weekend:THURSDAYWithout Walls FestivalWhere: Liberty Station; Cost: Free - (Thursday - Sunday) Jump into an immersive blend of performances and theater-style productions, most of which are free to the public. Performances include interactive shows, bands, creative dancing, and short plays.Del Mar International Horse ShowWhere: Del Mar Fairgrounds; Cost: Free - (Thursday - Sunday) See Olympic and world-class athletes compete for a spot in Wolrd Cup Finals during the Del Mar International Horse Show. The show encompasses world-class jumping and horse riding as part of the Longines FEI Jumping World Cup North America League.FRIDAY54th annual Borrego Days Desert FestivalWhere: Christmas Circle Park, Borrego Springs; Cost: Free(Friday - Sunday) Borrego Days celebrates the desert town with a parade and fly-over, activities for kids, a car show, live music, art, and so much more between the event's opening parade and festival. Delicious food will be on hand from vendors, arts and crafts to sale, and a kids zone with even more fun.Lowriders: The Art of Low N' SlowWhere: San Diego Automotive Museum; Cost: - (Friday - Sunday) Explore the global and local phenomenon of low rider culture and communities at the San Diego Automotive Museum. The museum's exhibit covers communities in the U.S., Japan, Europe, and Latin countries.SATURDAY25th annual Eastlake Cycle & 5K and Technology & Innovation FairWhere: Eastlake Middle School; Cost: Free - Lace up your shoes for a 5K cycle or run and hang out afterward to explore the world of STEAM with free activities and education at Eastlake Middle School this weekend. Local experts will be on hand to lead sessions in STEAM activities and parents can learn about local programs available for kids.Villains in the VillageWhere: Third Avenue, Chula Vista; Cost: -Families are invited to stroll Chula Vista's Third Avenue as villains take over for frightfully fun selfies, eerie children's activities, delicious eats and drinks, and a costume contest during the Village holiday takeover.Bahia FestWhere: Embarcadero Marina Park North; Cost: - 0More than 7,000 music fans are expected at Embarcadero Marina for Bahia Fest, featuring an all-star lineup of Latin reggae musicians, delicious craft beer and bites from local restaurants, and local arts and crafts vendors as well. SUNDAYEscondido Grand Avenue FestivalWhere: Grand Ave., Escondido; Cost: FreeStroll through Escondido's Grand Ave. and check out hundreds of vendors, international cuisine, local entertainment, and more during Grand Ave. Festival. A kids corner offers youngsters arts and crafts fun and Art in the Garden gives visitors the chance to peruse unique displays.Saltdog ClassicWhere: Encinitas Community Park; Cost: Free - Encinitas' community festival brings out live music, craft breweries, and local artists and businesses to enjoy the sights, sounds, and tastes of Encinitas, while benefitting Rancho Coastal Humane Society.The Haunted HotelWhere: Westfield Mission Valley; Cost: - The popular attraction moves from downtown to Mission Valley for 2019, offering three haunted features and free parking. The Haunted Hotel is not recommended for young children and pregnant women will not be allowed inside. 4305