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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — This year, many will agree that the lights that routinely illuminate the holidays are needed more than ever. Year after year, a variety of San Diego County areas dress up their homes in spectacular Christmas light displays. Some homes go all-out, covering every inch of the property in lights. Some put together elaborate scenes bringing out the kids in us.FOR A COMPREHENSIVE LIST OF HOLIDAY LIGHTS IN SAN DIEGO COUNTY, VISIT OUR CONTENT PARTNERS AT SAN DIEGO FAMILY MAGAZINEWhatever the display's theme or skill level, it's a tradition that many have come to enjoy every year.(This year, many neighbors are asking the public to enjoy the lights from their cars and to avoid walking around neighborhoods or gathering due to the pandemic.)Here's where you can find some of the best lights throughout San Diego County this year:North CountyCarlsbad: The "Carlsbad Christmas House" lights up with flamingos and penguins, animated window displays, dancing with Santa, and the Land of Misfit Toys at 7607 Romeria Street. More info.Del Mar Fairgrounds: A magnificent display of lights and sounds will ring in the holidays at the Del Mar Fairgrounds this season, with Holidays in Your Car from Dec. 5 - Dec. 24, Dec. 26 - Dec. 30, and Jan. 2, 2021. More than one million LED lights, holograms, and projection mapping animated to holiday music will take over the fairgrounds for visitors to enjoy their own little sleigh ride, with some displays standing at over 40 feet high. More info.Rancho Bernardo: Homes lining the cul-de-sac of Tristania Pl. are dressed top to bottom with lights, spelling out "hope," "joy," and "Noel" across homes plus much more.Carmel Mountain: Homes in the Fairway Village area of Carmel Mountain will be decked out in lights! Check out the lights from Dec. 1 to Jan. 1 from dusk to 10:30 p.m. nightly. Vehicles are welcome to drive around and visitors are asked not to walk around the neighborhood. More info.Poway: "Candy Cane Lane" covers Hickory Ct., Hickory St., Butterwood Ct., and Rockrose Ct. in Poway, beginning the weekend after Thanksgiving until at least Jan. 1. More info.Rancho Penasquitos: "Christmas Card Lane" can be found on Oviedo St. off Black Mountain Rd. Homes create plywood "cards" with Christmas themes or cartoons and light displays from dusk until about 10 p.m. throughout December. More info.Scripps Ranch: "Merry-tage Court" can be found at Stonebridge Pkwy and Merritage Ct. covered in bright holiday themes throughout December from dusk until about 10 p.m. nightly.East CountyLakeside: Homes on Paseo Palmas Dr. can be seen dressed up in lights this season, as lights string together each home at "Tinsel Town." Visitors can see the displays from about 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. throughout December. More info.Santee: "Starlight Circle" or "Sunburst Santee" covers Tomel Ct. off Magnolia Ave. Residents have their own schedule for how long lights will be up, but visitors can usually catch them from about 5:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. More info.El Cajon: Homes on Pepper Dr. will be dressed up in festive holiday lights. The hilltop street becomes a neighborhood beacon every holiday season. More info.Lemon Grove: Lemon Grove's "Santa Claus Lane" can be found on Sheri Lane.Central San DiegoTierrasanta: Visit 5306 Belardo Dr. for a decked out light display and nightly beginning the Saturday after Thanksgiving. More info.Clairemont: Clairemont's "Clairemont Christmas Park" on Lana Dr. & Jamar Dr.SeaWorld San Diego: While SeaWorld San Diego is closed, the park's sky tower will light up like a Christmas tree throughout the month.Bankers Hill: "The Forward House" in Banker’s Hill is located at Ivy St. and 1st Ave. and has been a neighborhood holiday tradition for years. The house will be lit generally from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. More info.South BayChula Vista: "Christmas Circle" is on Whitney St. and Mankato St. in Chula Vista. Homes along the streets will be lit up throughout December from dusk until about 10 p.m. each night.Chula Vista: Homes on Porch Swing Street deck out their properties in lights and string them across the street overhead throughout the month of December. 4153
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- The San Diego County Treasurer-Tax Collector’s downtown San Diego office reopened Monday for in-person services.The office at 1600 Pacific Hwy., Room 162, was closed in mid-March due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Public health and safety measures are now in place at the office, allowing for business to resume.“The health of our employees and customers is our top priority, so we have made some changes to how we do business face-to-face. We are pleased to reopen our downtown branch and will be reviewing further possible branch openings under a phased and cautious approach to ensure everyone’s safety,” said County Treasurer-Tax Collector Dan McAllister.Some of the measures implemented at the office include:Protective barriers on countersCashiers placed at least six feet away from each otherFloor markers for customers to maintain social distancingPublic counters being cleaned throughout the dayDespite the reopening, McAllister said customers can still complete business via the SDTTC.com website or without even visiting the office at all. Without coming into the office, customers can:Pay their property taxes onlineMail a penalty cancellation request form with payment and documentationCall our office at 1-877-829-4732 to get questions answeredEmail a request for a mobile home tax clearance certificateEmail a claim for an unclaimed property tax refundMail in a TOT reporting form and paymentThe county is reminding those who have not paid both installments of 2019-20 property taxes have until June 30 to pay “before the bill goes into default and additional fees and penalties apply.”Small business owners or homeowners directly impacted by the pandemic have until May 5, 2021 to file for a special penalty cancellation request. 1768
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- The raging Valley Fire that erupted Saturday afternoon and has quickly consumed over 4,000 acres is leaving numerous East San Diego County residents looking for shelter.We've listed information, organizations, and evacuation centers for those in need.INTERACTIVE FIRE MAPhttps://www.10news.com/news/local-news/fire-map-wind-driven-valley-fire-explodes-several-hundred-acresEVACUATION CENTERSSteele Canyon High School2440 Campo RoadJoan MacQueen Middle School2001 Tavern RoadMAP: https://goo.gl/maps/XUkFb3H1LBtkbwCL8An evacuation order means that persons in the affected area need to evacuate to a safe location to ensure their safety. If you need emergency assistance in evacuation, call 9-1-1.AIR POLLUTION CONTROL DISTRICThttps://www.sdapcd.org/Due to the Valley Fire burning near Alpine in San Diego County, areas of smoke are affecting parts of the County. The smoke dispersed throughout much of the western portion of San Diego County overnight and has also traveled offshore. While much of this smoke remains above ground level, there is smoke affecting the inland valleys west of Alpine as of Sunday morning. The smoke may have more widespread impacts later this morning and this afternoon in the coastal areas and inland valleys. In areas impacted by the smoke, fine particulates, or PM2.5 concentrations, may reach unhealthful levels.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.In addition, air quality will be negatively affected by Ozone levels that are expected to be unhealthy for sensitive groups to unhealthy in many areas this afternoon due to the extreme heat.In areas where you smell smoke it is advised that you limit physical/outdoor activity. If possible, stay indoors to limit your exposure to fine particulate matter and ozone, especially those residents with respiratory or heart disease, the elderly, and children.AMERICAN RED CROSS SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONhttps://www.redcross.org/American Red Cross Southern California Region, serving San Diego, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and Imperial Counties.The Red Cross team provided safe shelter for three families affected by the fire. The Temporary Evacuation Point at Joan MacQueen Middle School has closed. The Temporary Evacuation Point at Steele Canyon High School remains open.SAN DIEGO HUMANE SOCIETYIf you need help evacuating: call @sdhumane at 619-299-7012 (press 1). Remember to evacuate early, take your pets with you, bring food & water. #SDHSEmergencyResponseTeamMore information on the many services being offered by the SDHS can be found at https://www.sdhumane.org/about-us/news-center/emergency-updates/.ANIMAL EVACUATION SITE The County Animal Services South Shelter is welcoming evacuated animals. The shelter is located at 5821 Sweetwater Road. Anyone who needs more information is asked to call 619-236-2341.Large animals, such as horses and livestock, can be taken to Iron Oak Canyon Ranch, 12310 Campo Road, Spring Valley.SAN DIEGO COUNTY EMERGENCY SITE INFORMATIONPlease note that News Updates on SDCountyEmergency.com are intended for regional emergencies that pose significant threat to large numbers of people and/or property. Check media and local fire and/or law enforcement for information about smaller, localized events.https://www.sdcountyemergency.com/content/oesemergency/en-us/updates.htmlHOW TO HELPThe Red Cross is not accepting material donations of any kind, including food or items, due to COVID-19. Instead, the Red Cross asks that financial donations be made through redcross.org, by calling 1-800-RED CROSS, or by texting CAWILDFIRES to 90999 to make a donation. 3822
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - This week, Team 10 was given an exclusive look inside a controversial nonprofit North County horse rescue, after it announced in April it was shutting down. 10News Investigative Reporter Jennifer Kastner interviewed the founder, who claims that both she and the horses are victims in this tragic ending.“I've always said I thought this should be a movie or a show because it's more dramatic than anything you see on television,” says Michelle Cochran of HiCaliber Horse Rescue in Valley Center.RELATED: Questions of fraud and abuse at prominent horse rescue in San Diego CountyWith her “f-bombs”, tattoos and piercings, Cochran is the black sheep of horse rescue. Yet beneath the tough exterior, she feels crippled over the fate of her highly criticized nonprofit. Even after announcing its closure in April, Cochran says she is still overwhelmed by cyberbullies who track her every move.“[They want to know] where I'm going, what I'm doing, how I’m doing it and what I'm dressed like. Did I gain weight? Did I lose weight? What does my makeup look like? My teeth? Did I get a nose job? A boob job? Nothing is off limits," she explains.Just this Thursday, 10News saw a meme posted on Facebook, attacking Cochran.10News’ first visit to HiCaliber Horse Rescue was in February when Cochran was embroiled in accusations of fraud and abuse. She would post videos at horse auctions, begging for money to buy sickly livestock that she said would otherwise ship to slaughterhouses in Mexico. After collecting donations, horses would come home with her. Some would be rehabilitated. Others were shot.“You're accused of buying horses that can't be saved, raising money to save them and then shooting them,” we told her in February. She replied, “It costs money to save them. It costs money to diagnose them. It costs money to haul them. It costs money to get their body removed."Gunshot euthanasia is legal in California. Cochran claims it's cheap, quick, easiest on horses, and more compassionate than sending them to slaughter. However, her critics have ripped her apart for her practices and the property's conditions.In February, horse trainer Abby Kogler told us, “We’re against getting horses from the abusers and then taking trusting people's money who think they're saving horses from this nonexistent slaughter pipeline and then they're just put down.”Despite arguments from some people that Cochran was stealing donor money, tax records appear to reveal that 96% of the ,017,523 brought in over a year, went to operational expenses.Even though a county investigation came up mostly clean, HiCaliber's reputation was still ruined from the social media frenzy.“There was really no option but to close down because we were assumed to be guilty before anyone gave us the chance to be innocent,” says Cochran.She tells us that donations dropped by more than 65 percent and volunteers dropped by 85 percent. While she’s managed to adopt out more than 50 horses, she still has more than 100 horses to find homes for. The problem is that there are reportedly very few takers.“It's a struggle but it's what I signed up for,” she adds.San Diego County Code Enforcement will continue to fine HiCaliber Horse Rescue if it doesn't keep reducing its horse population. The next milestone placed on the rescue is to reduce to 113 horses by the end of July.Cochran adds,” The real enemy here is slaughter. If you're trying to fight the battle of keeping America's horses out of the slaughter pipeline, you have to consider euthanasia as one of the answers to the problem.”The California Veterinary Medical Board is still conducting an investigation into the practices at HiCaliber Horse Rescue.Cochran says she’ll reconsider keeping the rescue open if she can find a donor to buy the ranch or help the nonprofit find a more affordable location.Correction: An earlier version of this article reported that San Diego County Animal Services will implement the fines. San Diego County Code Enforcement is the correct sector. 4073
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- Think it’s hot in San Diego? Well, it is, but it could be much, much worse.All things considered, even though San Diego County is experiencing some heat and humidity, America’s Finest City isn’t even on the map of America’s hottest cities.Data website Currentresults.com compiled data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and found the hottest cities in the country.The data shows the US cities with the hottest average summer highs in June, July and August. Check out the list below for more: 546