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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — San Diego's weekend is filled with opportunities to get out and experience art, food, and the city's finest.Encinitas is celebrating the beauty of classic automobiles with Cruise Nights, giving locals the chance to enjoy a variety of autos and spend the night strolling along Highway 101's shops and restaurants.In celebration of Art Museum Day, the San Diego Museum of Art is offering free admission to visitors to come enjoy everything the museum has to offer.MORE: Don't see anything you like? Check out our event calendar for even more local eventsTacos will play center stage at Waterfront Park as SoCal Taco Fest returns with delicious tacos, live music, Lucha Libre wrestling, and chihuahua races.Plus Space Day and some free kite fun in OB are on the docket. Here's a look at what's happening this weekend.THURSDAYEncinitas Cruise NightsWhere: S. Coast Highway 101; Cost: FreeThe streets of Encinitas will be filled with classic cars, hots rods, and exotic autos for Cruise Nights. The free events invites the public to come check out amazing automobiles and enjoy the restaurants and shops along Highway 101.Pints for Paws fundraiserWhere: Novo Brazil Brewing; Cost: Come out to Novo Brazil Brewing to help raise funds for the Chula Vista Animal Care Facility. A donation will get guests a pint glass or entry into a raffle for VIP ticket to Rebelution or Santana. Plus, you can enjoy some of the South Bay's delicious craft beer while donating to a local cause. FRIDAYArt Museum DayWhere: San Diego Museum of Art; Cost: FreeIn celebration of Art Museum Day and to highlight the opportunities art museums foster in the community, the San Diego Museum of Art is offering free admission to the museum all day Friday.Mass Creativity workshopWhere: Harborside Elementary School; Cost: FreeThe New Children's Museum is hosting a Mass Creativity workshop in Chula Vista, an engaging workshop with artist Tanya Agui?iga that encourages kids to exploretheir creativity and imagination.SATURDAYSoCal Taco FestWhere: Waterfront Park; Cost: - 5More than 25 restaurants will swarm Waterfront Park for SoCal Taco Fest, packed with a variety of delicious tacos, live music, Lucha Libre wrestling, chihuahua races, beauty pageant, margarita tent, and more.Space Day CelebrationWhere: San Diego Air and Space Museum; Cost: Free - .95It's Space Day at the San Diego Air and Space Museum, a day filled with opportunities to learn about the great beyond, tale with space experts, touch a meteorite, design your own space patch or rocket, and hands-on activities at the San Diego Air and Space Museum.Ocean Beach Kite FestivalWhere: Robb Athletic Field; Cost: FreeGrab a kite and head down to Robb Athletic Field for some kite designing, watching, and most importantly flying at the OB Kite Festival, featuring a community fair, food vendors, and more.SUNDAYOMBAC Over the Line BeerfestWhere: Mariner's Point, Mission Bay Park; Cost: - 0(Saturday - Sunday) Enjoy some over-the-line, delicious food, and craft beer in Mission Bay during the two-day OMBAC tournament. OTL players will face off in a double elimination tournament in four divisions.Escondido Grand Ave FestivalWhere: Downtown Escondido; Cost: FreeDowntown Escondido will be abuzz with food, live music, games and rides for Grand Ave Festival. New this year, the festival will host an art show with talented local artists and interactive booths for kids.Fiesta del Sol 2019Where: Fletcher Cove Beach Park; Cost: Free(Saturday - Sunday) Solana Beach's annual Fiesta del Sol celebration brings out a lineup of great, diverse local bands, delicious gourmet food trucks and booths, and rides, games, and hands-on activities for kids to the beachside park for two days of outdoor festival fun. 3791
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - Scripps Health revealed Tuesday plans for major new construction projects and buildings at its hospitals in San Diego County.The master plan includes flexible design spaces for evolving technology in patient rooms, operating rooms, laboratories and diagnostic centers, Scripps officials said.More care will be delivered on an outpatient basis at clinics and other facilities so Scripps can use acute care hospitals to care for the most seriously ill patients, said the company."This is our vision to build the health care system of the future - starting today," said Scripps president and CEO Chris van Gorder. "Our focus is on delivering the right care in the right setting that reflects the changing health care needs of the communities we serve across the San Diego region."The projects will be financed by operating revenues, borrowing and philanthropy, Scripps said.Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla:Construction includes a new seven-story, 401,000 square-foot hospital tower. It will feature a woman's health center, nursery, and neonatal ICU. The building should be finished in 2024.Scripps Mercy Chula Vista, Scripps Green Hospitals:The facilities will undergo seismic retrofitting. The work will start in 2022 in Chula Vista and 2027 at Scripps Green.Scripps Mercy San Diego:The campus will be the largest project for the health care system. The existing acute care building will be replaced with a new 710,000 square-foot 15-story tower. Most of the rooms will be private. The central energy plant will also be upgraded. Construction will start in 2022 and end in 2027.Scripps Memorial Hospital Encinitas:Plans include a new 185,000 square-foot three-story acute care building, a new medical office building, seismic retrofitting and energy plant upgrades. The work will be finished in 2024.Other projects:Construction includes two new Scripps MD Anderson outpatient cancer centers at Scripps Mercy San Diego and Scripps Radiation Therapy Center in La Jolla. Scripps will also build a clinic on Jefferson St. in Oceanside and renovate its Gateway 2 building in Chula Vista. 2116

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — San Diego Police said Wednesday officers detained a woman who reportedly had a shotgun in the parking lot of the department's headquarters.Police said a woman drove into the parking lot just before 12:30 p.m. One department employee saw she was armed with a shotgun, police said.Officers quickly surrounded the woman's vehicle and a Psychiatric Emergency Response Team (PERT) was on hand to assess and provide support to the woman, SDPD added.Within about 10 minutes, the police said the woman was detained. Several weapons and ammunition were also confiscated, according to the department. 617
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- Some San Diegans are pushing back against the county’s order to wear face coverings in public.The face coverings requirement in San Diego County -- prompted by the COVID-19 pandemic -- has been in effect since early May, but in other California counties, rules are starting to change.Last week, Orange County officials decided to roll back their mandate and only “strongly recommended” that masks be worn in public settings.Riverside and San Bernardino counties have also relaxed their respective mask mandates.“It's a hard thing to draw the lines. There’s human nature, there’s a concern about such a ramp-up of state enforcement of things,” said University of St. Thomas Law School Professor Robert Kahn.Kahn, an expert in mask law and history, said one of the biggest issues is people are not used to taking orders from health officials.That feeling is evident in social media postings on pages like Reopen San Diego on Facebook, where there is a growing push to rescind San Diego’s mask mandate.Many health officials still agree that face coverings can block transmission of the respiratory droplets released by people when breathing or talking.During a Monday press briefing, San Diego County Public Health Officer Wilma Wooten said, “Every jurisdiction is different, but San Diego will continue mandatory face coverings.”Kahn said no matter what rules or laws government might put in place, people will ultimately have to abide by what businesses want their customers to do.“Businesses will make their decision; private business, free enterprise understands this,” he said.Orange County’s public health officer resigned rather than remove the county’s mask order. The OC supervisors then replaced her with someone who would make that change.California officials recommend face coverings, but they leave the final decision up to individual counties. 1882
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — San Diego's LGBT community center, The Center, says it will not allow armed, uniformed officers at its facility or events.The announcement comes less than a week after San Diego Pride said it would not allow law enforcement to participate in the parade or events.The Center's Board of Directors voted that starting Tuesday, armed, uniformed law enforcement officers will not be allowed at the facility or future events unless its a last resort or true emergency, according to CEO Cara Dessert.RELATED: San Diego Pride: No law enforcement agency contingents in Parade, Festival"This is not about good or bad individual law enforcement officers, but rather a systemic problem in law enforcement that devalues Black lives and creates an environment in which our Black community does not feel welcomed, and in fact strikes fear and trauma," Dessert wrote, in part. Read Dessert's full statement here.Dessert added that The Center will, "continue to engage in dialogue over the coming weeks with our community, including our Black LGBTQ community leaders as to how to better serve the Black community, and what that means for our relationship with local law enforcement."In a statement to 10News, San Diego Police Chief David Nisleit said he was extremely disappointed with the news."I am extremely disappointed with the decision made by the leadership of the San Diego LGBT Community Center. Banning people because of their profession and their desire to serve the community is counter to the message of inclusion they have always stood for. The decision to exclude uniformed police officers should be reconsidered," Nisleit wrote.Last week, San Diego Pride officials asked Mayor Kevin Faulconer and the city to support a 4-step action plan on how law enforcement can support Pride.The statements come amid a nationwide push for police reform and reassessment on how departments are funded in the wake of the in-custody death of George Floyd in Minneapolis on Memorial Day. 1996
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