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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Summer is in full swing, with plenty of opportunities for families to get out and enjoy San Diego.San Diego Pride kicks off this week, with the annual Pride Festival on Friday, featuring stage of live music and performances, community booths, games, and more. Then Saturday, the community lines University Ave. in Hillcrest for the annual Pride Parade.In Escondido, the Inspire Festival invites attendees to let their inner artists out with interactive art activities, live music, and delicious local wines and craft beer.MORE: Don't see anything you like? Check out our event calendar for even more local eventsThe annual OTL World Championships return to Fiesta Island on Saturday, continuing San Diego's longstanding summer tradition with plenty to enjoy along the coast.Here's a look at what else is happening around San Diego:THURSDAYSantee Summer Concert Series Where: Town Center Community Park East; Cost: FreeCheck out the sweet tunes of the Bill MaGee Blues Band during Santee's Summer Concert Series. The community event hosts free concerts over the summer complete with a weekly Food Truck Rally every Thursday.The Cado pop-up museum Where: North City; Cost: - (Thursday - Sunday) "The Cado" pop-up museum opens in San Marcos' North City development, bringing interactive art installations like the Ripe Room, Haas Hall, and The Pit Stop to guests who want to dig deeper into the fruit.FRIDAYPride FestivalWhere: Balboa Park; Cost: Free - 0Pride celebrates San Diego's LGBT community with multiple stages of music and dancing at the Pride Festival in Balboa Park. The family-friendly event also features community booths, games, beer gardens, art, and vendors.Marvel in the MoonlightWhere: Quartyard; Cost: Free - Enjoy an evening with "Captain Marvel" as UCSD hosts a screening of the hit film downtown. Families can enjoy a beer garden, food, and a dog run area for pooches. Anyone under 18 and anyone who shows up in costume can get into the event for free.SATURDAYInspire FestivalWhere: Escondido Heritage Garden; Cost: - Paint on a giant canvas, discover delicious wines from local wineries, sample craft beers, and let yourself go to live music as the Inspire Festival heads to Escondido. One ticket includes unlimited food and drink tastings, access to interactive art exhibits, and the festival's live entertainment.Pride ParadeWhere: Hillcrest Pride Flag at University Avenue and Normal Street.; Cost: FreeCheer on floats, marching bands, and colorful cars as they roll through Hillcrest in celebration of San Diego Pride. San Diego's largest single-day civic event celebrates the local LGBT community and headlines Pride weekend.lmperial Beach Sun & Sea FestivalWhere: Imperial Beach; Cost: FreeThe Sun and Sea Festival brings thousands to Imperial Beach every summer for a day of sandcastle competition, concerts, food and more. This year, the theme of the competition will be "Under the Sea," as world-class sculptors create magnificent works of sand art.SUNDAY66th Over-the-Line World ChampionshipWhere: Fiesta Island; Cost: Free to spectate(Saturday - Sunday) The 66th OTL World Championship returns to Fiesta Island Park for two weekends July 13 and 14, and July 20 and 21. The annual event, known for its color team names and characters, started locally in the 1950s and has since become a highlight of summertime in San Diego.Bayside Summer Nights: Harry Potter and The Half-Blood PrinceWhere: Embarcadero Marina Park South; Cost: - 1(Saturday - Sunday) The San Diego Symphony is getting into the Comic-Con spirit early with a two-night performance of music from "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince" as the film is screened, part of the Bayside Summer Pops concert series.Vines & Vittles FestivalWhere: Webb Park, Rancho Bernardo; Cost: - Enjoy a Western-themed festival with plenty of wine and cultural performances and music, featuring the Shirthouse Band and Mariachi Victoria de San Diego. Families can sink their teeth into delicious ice cream, popcorn, and more treats and local artists will showcase "trading post" post wares. 4127
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - The County of San Diego filed a lawsuit Wednesday against the heads of Homeland Security, Border Patrol, Customs and Border Protection, and Immigration and Customs Enforcement, calling for the reinstatement of the “Safe Release” program and reimbursement for the cost of treating a recent influx of asylum seekers. Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, Acting Immigration and Customs Enforcement Director Ronald D. Vitiello, Immigrant and Customs Enforcement Executive Associate Director Matthew T. Albence, Commissioner of Customs and Border Protection Kevin K. McAleenan, and Chief of Border Patrol Carla L. Provost are named in the lawsuit. The lawsuit claims the county has been harmed as a result of what it describes as a “sudden and unlawful change” in policy, releasing asylum-seeking migrants from federal detention into the county while “denying them previously-provided assistance in reaching their final destination(s) outside the County.” RELATED: Reaction: County of San Diego sues federal agency chiefs over asylum seeker careFrom 2009 to October 2018, ICE implemented a policy described in the lawsuit as “Safe Release”, which provided asylum seekers assistance in reaching final destinations outside San Diego, attorneys say. The aid came in the form of phone calls and transportation to other areas of the U.S. ICE officials said the policy ended last fall due to limited resources to support the program, according to the suit. The lawsuit claims some 40 asylum seekers and family members were dropped off at a San Diego bus station within 24 hours after the end of Safe Release. County attorneys say since then, as many as 80 parents and young children have been released into San Diego County each day. County attorneys wrote the vast majority of asylum seekers and family members must remain in the area without sufficient means to support themselves. RELATED: Exclusive look inside San Diego shelter for migrant asylum seekersSan Diego County has provided surveillance, monitoring, and training, along with health and food safety screenings for the migrant shelter operated by the San Diego Rapid Response Network. Projected costs of the County’s assistance exceed .1 million as of Mar. 22, the county reports. County officials are calling for a judge to reinstate the Safe Release policy and rule that the change in federal government policy violated Administrative Procedure Act. The County of San Diego also wants a preliminary and permanent injunction requiring the defendants to resume providing asylum seekers and their family members assistance in reaching destinations outside the County. RELATED: County's projected costs of San Diego shelter for asylum-seekers top .3 millionThe lawsuit claims the defendants violated procedural due process, citing the Fifth Amendment that “no person may be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law.” 2931
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - The first round of artists for San Diego’s Wonderfront music festival, supported by the star power of Tony Hawk, Trevor Hoffman, and Rob Machado, was announced Monday. The event will take place on seven stages in parks and on piers along the Port of San Diego, from South Embarcadero up to Broadway Pier. Wonderfront is scheduled for Nov. 22-24, 2019, the weekend before Thanksgiving. Wonderfront organizers plan to mix well-known stars with local favorites and emerging artists. “Our goal with this lineup was to have it stacked from start to finish each day with great artists. It’s hard to really call any certain bands our so-called headliners as so many lines of bands on this festival are all headliners in their own right,” said Wonderfront co-founder Paul Thornton. The first round of artists, announced Monday, include Miguel, Slightly Stoopid, Ben Harper & The Innocent Criminals, MGMT, Dimitri Vegas & Like Mike, Nicky Jam, Don Omar, Vince Staples, Tyga, Los Angeles Azules, Tucanes de Tijuana, Walk the Moon, Phantogram, X Ambassadors, Michael Franti & Spearhead, Lil Dicky, Big Gigantic, and Pennywise. A second round of artists will be named later in the summer, organizers said. North County resident Tony Hawk will have a presence at the festival with the Huckjam stage for music and a skateboarding ramp, where he and other pro skaters will perform tricks. “I’m excited to bring back the Huckjam format (choreographed and freestyle skating with live music) after 10 years of hiatus, and there is no better place for it than my hometown. I’m proud to be involved with Wonderfront, and it’s been a blast helping handpick the legendary punk bands for our stage.” Tony Hawk, Wonderfront Festival Partner. Tickets go on sale Friday, June 14 at 10 a.m. and start at 9 for a three-day pass, according to organizers. Subscribers to the festival’s WonderLIST will have access to pre-sale Early Bird discounts June 7.Get more information on the Wonderfront website. 2014
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - The first thing Whitney Dickerson does when she gets home from work each evening is make a cup of her favorite tea.It's because her job as a veterinary technician can be stressful. "Everyday I go in and I don't know what's going to go through those doors," she said. "It could be a really emaciated animal with severe mange, it could be a really happy lab coming through."But Dickerson's angst doesn't end when her shift is over. She's living paycheck to paycheck, and has moved seven times in her six years in San Diego just to find a rent she can afford.COMPLETE COVERAGE: Making it in San DiegoShe's now splitting a two-bedroom apartment in Talmadge, which goes for ,874 a month. She's not sure how much more she'll be able to afford. "I feel like the city's slowly pushing me out," she said.Now, the rent's getting so high that it's near a tipping point for thousands of San Diegans. More than half of those who responded to a recent 10News Union-Tribune scientific poll said they'd seriously considered leaving California in the last year. </p><p> The average rent is now ,887 a month, up 8 percent from a year earlier, according to Marketpointe Realty Advisors. And CoreLogic reports the median home price in the county is now about 0,000. "That's a problem for everybody, and I think everybody feels that," said Rick Gentry, who heads the San Diego Housing Commission, which oversees affordable housing in the city. </p><p><strong>HOW DID WE GET HERE?Gentry describes something of a perfect storm when it comes to housing in San Diego -1) There's not enough housing for the middle class.2) There aren't enough resources for low-income individuals.3) The current market has already swallowed up the glut of homes built during the housing bubble before the market crashed in 2008. "And that means the marketplace has gotten that much more expensive and that much tighter," Gentry said. "There's no place to move to."Gentry added turnover has declined drastically at the 3,400 affordable apartments the commission manages, and the section 8 voucher waiting list has ballooned to 80,000. Plus, San Diego County continues to grow with more jobs - employers added 27,000 new payroll positions in the last 12 months. Meanwhile, developers in the county only pulled permits for 10,000 new homes. "It takes a long, long time to get approvals for buildings to put new product online," said Mark Goldman, a real estate lecturer at San Diego State University. "There are more and more impact fees that makes it more expensive, there's a limited amount of land to do it."Goldman said it's a very complicated, risky business to start with a piece of vacant land and try to put a lot of housing on it.He said the amount of time that it takes given environmental review, regulations, and delays raises the cost of projects - to the point that some developers just drop it. WHAT WILL SOLVE THE CRISIS?There is movement in the works to spur development, including a region-wide plan to encourage development along transit routes. The city of San Diego also recently approved streamlining complexes with microunits and fewer parking requirements in these areas.The state also has a new law that allows the Housing Commission to make loans for the development of multifamily complexes that are affordable to middle income earners. 10News will dive deeper into solutions for Making it in San Diego on Friday.But until the prices come down, renters like Dickerson will be bracing for when their leases end. "If they go another 0-0 like a lot of places are doing," she said, "I'm probably going to have to move again."How are you dealing with the housing crunch? Email us at tips@10news.com. 3836
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - The FBI’s Violent Task Crimes Force asked for the public’s help Monday to find a man known as the “Burgundy Bandit” and wanted for nine robberies in San Diego, La Mesa, and El Cajon.In each robbery, the man entered the business and approached an employee, flashing a gun hidden in his waistband, the FBI said in a news release.The man demanded money and walked away. On several occasions, the man cased the business five minutes before the hold-up, officials said.Robbery locations include:June 27: Fred Loya Insurance, El Cajon 555