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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- Sharp Healthcare Tuesday announced the temporary closure of multiple locations amid the coronavirus pandemic. Sharp said Tuesday that it was temporarily closing its La Mesa West and Point Loma locations beginning Thursday, March 26. Sharp's Chula Vista location will also be operating at "limited capacity, offering only occupational medicine, pharmacy and urgent care services starting Friday, March 27."RELATED STORIES Nurse urges people to turn over N95 masks to San Diego hospitalsINTERACTIVE MAP: Confirmed coronavirus cases in San Diego CountyWho is open for business in San Diego during stay-at-home orderThe Chula Vista pharmacy said it is not seeing walk-in patients, but is offering free delivery and curbside pickup.The temporary closures are all in an effort to conserve and consolidate supplies, including personal protective equipment, a spokesperson for Sharp said. The temporary closures were also implemented to allocate cleaning resources to other sites. "Essential care for patients at these sites, and indeed all Sharp Rees-Stealy patients, will continue through video and phone visits or for patients who must be seen in person, at other Sharp Rees-Stealy clinics," the spokesperson said. The sites will re-open once the outbreak is over. "It is a consolidation of services which will allow the medical group to provide the safest and best care during this outbreak while also protecting our doctors and staff."Check with your hospital location to see whether or not appointments are being impacted. Meanwhile, Sharp Healthcare is beginning a drive-though donation drive 1619
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Some Pacific Beach families say they no longer feel comfortable at their public library because of the homeless population."It's no longer a library it's a homeless shelter, and that's the word that's spreading."Racheal Allen spends hours each day crusading for public safety in PB. The Neighborhood Watch Block Captain is tired of seeing the same problems on repeat at the library. "Cleanliness an issue, hygiene, I would not let my kid run around barefoot here," Allen said.MAP: Track crime happening in your neighborhoodMost recently she saw the swing sets being used as a clothesline. "I've seen a lot, but when I saw that it was a slap in the face," Allen added.And another slap in the face she says, a new library policy enacted last year. Under the old code of conduct, people sleeping in libraries were woken up and asked to leave.RELATED: Woman says homeless are stealing power from her City Heights apartment complex“It’s very broad and applies to everyone," Library Director Misty Jones said. "If I was to enforce I'm going to suspend a toddler who falls asleep or I’m going to going to suspend an 80-year-old man who nods off reading the newspaper.”Jones says now, staff will wake a person up but they won't be kicked out if they're not disrupting others. "It was punitive and unfair and targeting a specific population," Jones said.Jones says one reason the policy changed was after a librarian found a teenager sleeping. Rather than kick her out, she had a conversation with the teenager. RELATED: Neighbors fed up with homeless trash on undeveloped?College Area lot"She found out the girl was a victim of sex trafficking, she was able to call police, get social workers here and get her reunited with her family," Jones said.But Allen says she's seen illegal activity outside the library and worries relaxing this rule will only lead to more problems."I want the library to consistently enforce their rules, I want guards to consistently patrol, it seems they are only on top of it when the community pushes them to be on top of it," Allen said.And that, she says, is no solution at all. 2180

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- Sharp Healthcare Tuesday announced the temporary closure of multiple locations amid the coronavirus pandemic. Sharp said Tuesday that it was temporarily closing its La Mesa West and Point Loma locations beginning Thursday, March 26. Sharp's Chula Vista location will also be operating at "limited capacity, offering only occupational medicine, pharmacy and urgent care services starting Friday, March 27."RELATED STORIES Nurse urges people to turn over N95 masks to San Diego hospitalsINTERACTIVE MAP: Confirmed coronavirus cases in San Diego CountyWho is open for business in San Diego during stay-at-home orderThe Chula Vista pharmacy said it is not seeing walk-in patients, but is offering free delivery and curbside pickup.The temporary closures are all in an effort to conserve and consolidate supplies, including personal protective equipment, a spokesperson for Sharp said. The temporary closures were also implemented to allocate cleaning resources to other sites. "Essential care for patients at these sites, and indeed all Sharp Rees-Stealy patients, will continue through video and phone visits or for patients who must be seen in person, at other Sharp Rees-Stealy clinics," the spokesperson said. The sites will re-open once the outbreak is over. "It is a consolidation of services which will allow the medical group to provide the safest and best care during this outbreak while also protecting our doctors and staff."Check with your hospital location to see whether or not appointments are being impacted. Meanwhile, Sharp Healthcare is beginning a drive-though donation drive 1619
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- San Diego State University coronavirus cases alone are not enough to move the region into the more restrictive “purple” tier, the school said in a report Friday.The report comes as San Diego County sees an increase in cases following Labor Day weekend, SDSU said.The more restrictive tier would force more restrictions on businesses already impacted by the virus.RELATED STORIESWhat happens if San Diego County moves to California's most restrictive tierConfusion over San Diego schools' reopening plans if county falls into purple tierAccording to the state, should the region move to the purple tier, places of worship and personal care businesses would be forced outdoors, as would gyms, and businesses such as retail, restaurants, and personal care facilities would be forced to limit capacity further.SDSU said Friday that more than 1,500 students have been tested for COVID-19 since the school mandated testing for students who live on campus.Since August 24, 785 students have tested positive or are presumed positive for the virus. No faculty or staff are positive for the virus, the school said. 1132
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - Snoopy’s San Diego Comic-Con pop-up store is celebrating the Peanuts gang’s history with NASA and the Apollo 10 mission. In 1969, Apollo 10 used a lunar module to “snoop around” the moon’s surface in advance of the Apollo 11 moon landing. The crew named the module “Snoopy” and the command module “Charlie Brown”. As Gene Cernan, Apollo 10's Lunar Module Pilot once said, "No one remembers Apollo 10—until you tell them our spacecrafts were named Snoopy and Charlie Brown, and they say 'Oh! I remember!' " To honor the 50th anniversary, Oscar-winning director Morgan Neville created “Peanuts in Space: Secrets of Apollo 10”, a mockumentary demonstrating the ties between the beloved cartoons and the space agency. The film, starring Ron Howard as himself and Jeff Goldblum as a self-published NASA historian, is available free in the Apple TV app. Astronaut Snoopy merchandise, including skate decks and finger skateboards are available at the pop-up shop at 226 Fifth Ave. Fans can also buy replicas of a Snoopy “All systems go” pennant. Astronaut Snoopy plushes, pins, and t-shirts are available at the booth inside the convention center. 1167
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