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中山痔疮手术疼不疼
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发布时间: 2025-06-02 16:33:34北京青年报社官方账号
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  中山痔疮手术疼不疼   

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - Another storm arrived San Diego County Wednesday, putting fire-ravaged communities at risk of flooding. Cal Fire and county officials made free sandbags available to protect homes and property.Residents should check their homes to make sure drainage areas are clear of debris. Rain can also cause erosion in areas stripped of landscaping.Anyone who needs sandbags should check the list of locations provided by County Newscenter and call ahead for availability. County officials also say you should bring a shovel to fill your own bags with sand.Sand and BagsBonita/Sunnyside: 4900 Bonita Road, Bonita, CA 91902 P: 619-479-2346Boulevard: 40080 Ribbonwood Road, Boulevard, CA 91905 P: 619-390-2020De Luz: 39524 Daily Road, Fallbrook, CA 92028 P: 760-728-3140 *(Not staffed 24/7)De Luz: 39431 De Luz Road, Fallbrook, CA 92028 P: 760-728-2422Fallbrook: 4375 Pala Mesa Drive, Fallbrook, CA 92028 P: 760-723-2024Lakeside River Park Conservancy:12108 Industry Road, Lakeside CA 92040 P: 619-443-4770 *(Closed over the weekend)Palomar Mountain: 21610 Crestline Road, Palomar Mtn., CA 92060 P: 760-742-3701Ramona: 3410 Dye Road, Ramona, CA 92065 P: 760-789-0107Ramona: 24462 San Vicente Road, Ramona, CA 92065 P: 760-789-9465Rincon: 16971 Highway 76, Pauma Valley, CA 92061 P: 760-742-3243Valley Center: 28205 N. Lake Wohlford Road, Valley Center, CA 92082 P: 760-751-7605Warner Springs: 35227 Highway 79, Warner Springs, CA 92086 P: 760-782-9113Bags OnlyAlpine: 1364 Tavern Road, Alpine, CA 91901 P: 619-445-2635Deer Springs: 1321 Deer Springs Road, San Marcos, CA 92069 P: 760-741-5512Campo: 31577 Highway 94, Campo, CA 91906 P: 619-478-5516Campo (Lake Morena): 29690 Oak Drive, Campo, CA 91906 P: 619-478-5960Deer Springs: 8709 Circle R Drive, Escondido, CA 92026 P: 760-749-8001Deer Springs: 10308 Meadow Glen Way East, Escondido, CA 92026 P: 760-751-0820De Luz: 39431 De Luz Road, Fallbrook, CA. 92028 P: 760-728-2422Descanso: 24592 Viejas Grade Road, Descanso, CA 91916 P: 619-445-7508 (currently out of bags)Dulzura: 17304 Highway 94, Dulzura, CA 91917 P: 619-468-3391El Cajon: 551 Harbison Canyon Rd, El Cajon, CA 92019 P: 619-445-5001Escondido: 9127 W. Lilac Road, Escondido, CA 91916 P: 619-445-7508Jacumba: 1255 Jacumba St., Jacumba, CA 91934 P: 619-766-4535Jamul (Deerhorn): 2383 Honeysprings Road, Jamul, CA 91935 P: 619-468-3030Jamul: 14024 Peaceful Valley Ranch Rd, Jamul, CA 91935 P: 619-669-6580Julian: (Shelter Valley) 72160 Great Southern Overland, Julian, CA 92036 760-765-0155Mount Laguna: 10385 Sunrise Highway, Mt Laguna, CA 91948 P: 619-473-8281Ocotillo Wells: 5841 Highway 78, Borrego Springs, CA 92004 P: 760-767-7430Pine Valley: 28850 Old Highway 80, Pine Valley, CA 91962 P: 619-473-8445Portrero: 25130 Highway 94, Potrero, CA 91963 P: 619-478-5544Ramona: 829 San Vicente Road, Ramona, CA 92065 P: 760-789-8914Ramona: (Intermountain) 25858 A Highway 78, Ramona, CA 92065 P: 760-789-3710Ramona: (Mount Woodson) 16310 Highway 67, Ramona, CA 92065 P: 760-789-1150Ranchita: 37370 Montezuma Valley Road, Ranchita, CA 92066 P: 760-782-3467 *(Not staffed 24/7)San Pasqual: 17701 San Pasqual Valley Rd, Escondido, CA 92025 P: 858-573-1322Warner Springs: 31049 Highway 79, Warner Springs, CA 92086 P: 760-782-3560 3251

  中山痔疮手术疼不疼   

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - Californians associate “The Big One” with a devastating earthquake, but U.S. Geological Survey experts say a potentially larger threat could hit the state in the form of an “ARkStorm.”SPECIAL REPORT: Complete coverage of California's winter stormsExperts from every scientific field related to a potentially disastrous weather event gathered in 2010 to create the ARkStorm Scenario report for the USGS, imagining aspects of flooding of biblical proportions reaching the Western United States.“These storms do pose a real risk to California, in some ways far greater than that of earthquakes,” experts said in the study.The ARkStorm Scenario report reads like a Hollywood post-apocalyptic film script. Weeks of rain and snow are followed by catastrophic floods, landslides, and property and infrastructure damage which would cripple California’s economy.While the name “ARk” brings to mind a lifeboat scenario, ARkStorm project manager Dale Cox and chief scientist Lucile Jones coined the abbreviation to represent “atmospheric river.” A common term for meteorologists, these rivers in the sky work like highways for water vapor which comes to a screeching halt when it reaches land.A typical atmospheric river is the Pineapple Express, which pushes moisture from the tropics to the West Coast. It was a Pineapple Express that reached San Diego on Valentine’s Day, bringing warmer rain and lower snow levels, according to National Weather Service meteorologist Alexander Tardy.RELATED: Mega storm could cause billions in damage to California, report showsModels in the ARkStorm report show multiple areas of submergence in central San Diego. Mission Beach, which routinely sees flooding during heavy rain, is underwater in the ARkStorm scenario. Fiesta Island, ordinarily dry, disappears under Mission Bay.West-facing beaches, including those near Highway 1 in North San Diego County, are covered in water. Imperial Beach fares no better in its known run-off spots.“You have this outflow then you have the storm pushing in; it dams up,” says Cox of the coastal flooding impact.RELATED: How to check if your neighborhood is at risk of floodingTiming is critical in the creation of an ARkStorm. The same amount of precipitation predicted in the ARkStorm Scenario fell in 2017, says Cox. What made the difference in the impact, he says, is that the rain fell in 80 days instead of the 23 days imagined in the report.The West Coast will get notice, but not much, Tardy says. The most reliable models could give Californians a three-week warning for heavy rain.“We’re going to see it coming, but not where we can build a new levee,” Tardy said.RELATED: How San Diego's flooding compares to FEMA's historical hazard mapThe timing of the next ARkStorm is uncertain.“It could be next year, or it could be 120 years from now,” said Tardy.San Diego has seen significant rainfall in the 2018-2019 season, but few storms in recent years can compare with the potential disaster envisioned in ARkStorm.RELATED: Photos: Flooding catches San Diego by surprise“How do we help people understand it can get bigger than what they remember,” Jones said. “We prepare for the ones that we remember.”To create the report, experts accessed information from the records of Spanish ships off the coast of San Francisco in the 1600s. Other data were collected from tree rings, and newspaper reports from Sacramento in 1861 and 1862, the years an epic storm submerged California’s Central Valley past the level of telephone poles.As severe as it may seem, the ARkStorm Scenario is not the worst case scenario, said Jones.“If it has happened, it can happen again. And it probably will happen again.” 3695

  中山痔疮手术疼不疼   

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - Cal Trans closed down a section of southbound I-5 Thursday night.The closer started at 9:30 p.m. from the I-805 split to La Jolla Village Drive.The closure is expected to last until 5 a.m. Friday.Crews shut down the section of freeway due to necessary work on the construction of a trolley overpass over the interstate. Teams needed to bring heavy equipment onto the freeway to pour concrete onto the structure.Overnight and early morning commuters that take I-5 SB is being rerouted to I-805 SB and will need to use Highway 52 or I-8 to cut over.Crews say they will need to do follow up work within on the overpass in the next few weeks, so drivers should expect the same closure again. 716

  

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - At least two former students of a coding bootcamp in downtown San Diego received refunds after a Team 10 story earlier this summer.Sean Calma and Lane, who declined to give his last name, were enrolled at Origin Code Academy. They both said they were promised one-on-one instruction, which they did not receive. Neither had previous coding experience, so they both asked many questions before enrolling."One time, [the instructor] didn't even know what he was looking at on my computer screen. A second time, he was like, I don’t know what that is. Third time, he asked to go ask another instructor," Lane told Team 10 back in June.CEO Jeff Winkler said coding is difficult, but would be willing to talk to the students about getting their money back. During a previous Team 10 interview, he pointed to many satisfied students and dozens of graduates, including one who recently got a job at Facebook.Winkler did not respond to Team 10's request for comment regarding the refunds.Coding bootcamps are regulated by the Bureau for Private Postsecondary Education (BPPE). Origin Code Academy was previously operating without approval. The academy appealed its citation, its fine was reduced, and as of August, it is allowed to operate. As part of its approval, it had to pay back students who asked for refunds.Both Calma and Lane could not talk about their refunds the received after Team 10's story because both had to sign a non-disclosure agreement before getting their money back.A spokesperson for the BPPE told Team 10: "The Bureau encourages Origin Code Academy students who have not yet received a requested refund to contact the Bureau so we can investigate their claims. If any of the subjects in your story are still waiting for refunds please encourage them to reach out." 1809

  

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Border officials seized nearly two tons of drugs valued at millions of dollars at San Diego and Imperial Valley ports of entry last weekend.Between June 14 and June 16, Customs and Border Protection says more than 2,638 pounds of marijuana, 1093 pounds of methamphetamine, and five pounds of heroin were seized after being discovered inside doors, flooring, and other areas of vehicles and a tractor-trailer.In one instance, agents at the Calexico Port of Entry stopped a 34-year-old driver on Friday and referred the driver to a secondary inspection. There, canine agents made a positive detection and the port's imaging system discovered anomalies inside the vehicles flooring.Agents uncovered 40 packages of methamphetamine hidden in the vehicle.The same day, a tractor-trailer was stopped at the Otay Mesa Port of Entry, arriving from Mexico with a shipment listed as "watermelons and cactus." An officer referred the driver to a secondary inspection, where a canine officer alerted agents to a positive detection in pallets of watermelons.Agents found 311 packages of marijuana, worth an estimated ,557,000, intermixed with the fruit.During another incident on June 16, agents at the San Ysidro Port of Entry stopped a 35-year-old man where a secondary inspection revealed 86 packages of methamphetamine, with a street value of 3,700.All drivers were turned over to Homeland Security agents for processing and all vehicles and narcotics were seized by CBP. 1494

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