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(KGTV) -A nonprofit group is stepping up to find a solution following complaints of people living out of their cars across neighborhoods in San Diego. In February, the City of San Diego unanimously voted to repeal a 1983 city ordinance preventing people from living out of their vehicles. The change cleared the way for vehicle dwellers to live on any street within San Diego. A newly-formed resident coalition is documenting what it says are the problems the ordinance created. The information is being sent to San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer’s office. “We have literally witnessed buckets of waste being thrown out of some of these vehicles. I’ve witnessed drug dealing out of some of the motor homes, we’ve seen bike chop shops operating,” Pacific Beach resident Racheal Allen said. RELATED: Group pressures San Diego leaders to reverse vehicle habitation decisionCity councilwoman Jennifer Campbell recently proposed the city-owned South Shores parking lot near SeaWorld as a designated site for people living out of their cars. Some people had already began using the parking lot as a camping site, but some residents expressed discontent with that solution. The issue is a concern well beyond San Diego’s city limits. A nonprofit group, Jewish Family Services, is now working on a proposal that could potentially turn a privately-owned church parking lot in San Marcos into a designated space for these campers. RELATED: More San Diego residents with children are living in cars because of housing crisis, group saysA San Marcos resident said he’s not opposed to the idea, but he would need to know more about the specifics before taking up a stance on the issue. “How is it going to work, how are they going to control who comes and goes, how are they going to manage the security, the safety, and the health, I think first and foremost, and then what are they going to do if it somehow starts negatively impacting the community,” said Ruben Galvan. Jewish Family Services officials said the group is in the exploration phase of the proposal and is reviewing different sites as options. RELATED: Fake citations being left on Ocean Beach RVs, vans where people may live“If they control the situation it could probably work, for both the unfortunate homeless people and the community, I think they just need to monitor it and say, ‘hey, if it’s not working, we’ve got to figure something different,” Galvan said. 2426
(KGTV) - Was a sign posted at a DoubleTree hotel saying military guests were no longer welcome?Yes.Two employees at a DoubleTree in Colorado Springs posted the sign after a military event March 14th. They were subsequently fired and management put out a statement apologizing and letting military members know they are always welcome. 342
(KGTV) — Parents can bring their kids to Disneyland on the cheap to kick off the new year.The park is offering three-day, one-park admission for children ages 3 to 9 years old for per day. The tickets are only around for a limited time and include one Magic Morning, which grants admission to certain Disneyland attractions an hour before the park opens to the public.The deal slashes the price of a three-day, one-park ticket for kids down to 9. Usually three-day, one-park admission for children 3 to 9 runs 0, or a day, according to the park's website.RELATED: Auditions underway at Disneyland, CA Adventure for several character rolesA Park Hopper option is also available for 4. Usually, kids Park Hopper admission for three days runs 5, or 1 a day. The deal is open to all visitors 3 to 9 years old.For visitors at least 10 years old, those same ticket deals are available as long as they are Southern California residents.The discounted childrens tickets must be used either 13 days after first use or before May 21, 2020, whichever comes first. The SoCal resident tickets can be used on any three days through May 21. The deal is currently available until May 18, 2020, and guests are limited to eight tickets per person, per day.More information is available on Disneyland's website here. 1328
A 25-year-old California woman is accused of trying to flush her newborn baby down a toilet at a fast food restaurant where she was employed, KRON-TV reported. Sarah Lockner is held on an million bail and faces charges of attempted murder and inflicting great bodily harm to a child.According to an account of the incident given to KRON, Lockner, who is a cashier at a McDonald's in Redwood City, California, went to the restroom several times on Sept. 4, complaining of stomach pains. When a co-worker checked on Lockner in the restroom, they found blood on the floor. 596
(KGTV) -- Many scientists and doctors are cautiously optimistic about taking a step forward in the fight against COVID-19 after encouraging news from Pfizer Monday.Pfizer announced that early data revealed its vaccine was more than 90 percent effective in protecting trial participants against the coronavirus.The U.S. Federal Food and Drug Admiration still needs to review the drug for safety and efficacy, and Pfizer plans to seek an Emergency Use Authorization this month, but regardless some see this as a good sign for other vaccine trials.“I think this is frankly the break we’ve all been waiting for, and I hope we have many others to follow,” said Dr. Susan Little, a UC San Diego Professor of Medicine.UCSD is participating in Phase 3 clinical trials for Moderna, AstraZeneca, and Janssen vaccines.Little leads the AstraZeneca and Janssen trials, which resumed locally last week.“I think what this means for all of the trials that are available at this stage, this is incredibly good news,” she said. “So far, they all use the same approach to vaccine development; they are all targeting the same protein, the spike protein, on the coronavirus.”She expects similar results to come from Moderna’s early data sometime this year.“The Pfizer and the Moderna both use the same vaccine platform, the same structure for their vaccine construct, so there’s every reason to be very optimistic the Moderna study might show similar results,” she said. “While the AstraZeneca and the Janssen use a different vaccine construct, they both are targeting the same protein.”If Pfizer’s vaccine is approved, it could be given to healthcare workers and high-risk populations in just months, and the general population in 2021, according to Pfizer.Pfizer said it expects to produce 50 million vaccine doses globally in 2020 and up to 1.3 billion in 2021.Pfizer’s CEO, Albert Bourla, said he expects the vaccine to be free of charge for Americans. 1943