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2025-05-30 05:25:49
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  中山痔疮护理   

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - The San Diego Association of Governments will debate Wednesday the best way to get people to the airport. Four possible plans involving public transportation are involved. One would create a central terminal on Navy property near Old Town and tunnel under the airport with a people mover. Two other proposals would involve a terminal, but use an elevated people mover. The fourth option would extend the trolley, adding tracks along Harbor Drive. Dorene Robertson said the predictability of public transportation would be a benefit. “I know the shuttle's not going to get in a car accident, I know I'm going to get here when I plan to get here, I'm not going to get stuck on the freeway and not get here. So it takes away the uncertainty of getting to the airport on time,” said Robertson. Alex Santos, who typically relies on Uber to reach the airport, says he would only use public transportation if it was direct. “If it was dropping me off in front of my house or a townhome I live in, or a block away, that'd be perfect.” The SANDAG plans would cost anywhere from .8 billion to .7 billion dollars. They would serve as many as 44,000 people per day by 2050 and decrease traffic on Harbor Drive as much as 35 percent. City of San Diego and U.S. Navy officials signed an agreement last week to revamp the Navy complex near Old Town with the central terminal as a possibility for the project. 1424

  中山痔疮护理   

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — This weekend is packing platefuls of food, delicious brews, and tons of free fun to enjoy around town.Balboa Park's free food truck festival runs through Friday, hosting several culinary creators — and their trucks — at the park, as well as games and activities and live entertainment.Chicano Park marks their 49th annual Chicano Park Day celebration, celebrating the park's heritage and beautiful murals and art throughout the park.MORE: Don't see anything you like? Check out our event calendar for even more local eventsPacific Beach is celebrating the beach life during Bikes, Boards, and Brews, packed with delicious beer, food pairings, art, and more. And Belmont Park is ready to hop into Easter with the park's Easter Bash celebration this Sunday.Here's a look at what's happening this week:THURSDAYSpring Fling Food Truck FestivalWhere: Balboa Park; Cost: Free(Thursday - Friday) Balboa Park's Spring Fling Food Truck Festival will bring a variety of delicious culinary treats to Balboa Park. Not only will San Diegans get to try a variety of type of cuisine, but several hands-on activities for kids, and live entertainment will be provided. Games like giant checkers, bowling, cornhole, and giant tumbling blocks will also be available.San Diego Guitar FestivalWhere: Japanese Friendship Garden; Cost: - (Thursday and Saturday) Balboa Park's Japanese Friendship Garden hosts two days of diverse guitar performances, from acoustic to electric, with the debut of three top international guitarists: Bokyung Byun, featuring contemporary and traditional repertoire for guitar; Jiji, playing on classical and electric guitar; and Alexandra Iranfar, singing a variety of songs for voice and guitar.FRIDAYWomen's Film Festival San DiegoWhere: Lyceum Theatre in Horton Plaza; Cost: - (Friday - Saturday) For two days, San Diegans can enjoy cinema highlighting the importance of female representation in film, in front of and behind the camera, during Women's Film Festival San Diego. The festival provides female storytellers a platform to showcase their work and connect with other filmmakers.74th annual Del Mar National Horse Show: Western WeekWhere: Del Mar Fairgrounds; Cost: Starting at (Thursday - Saturday) The Del Mar National Horse Show hosts Western Week competitions culminating in Saturday's Night of the Horse event, where spectators will experience an action-packed horse show featuring Mexican revolutionaries, Pancho Villa and Emiliano Zapata and the courageous women who fought beside them, a reproduction of the Concord Stage Coach, and cowboys and cowgirls test their equestrian skills. SATURDAYSushi Making ClassWhere: Sabuku Sushi; Cost: - Want to learn how to make your own sushi at home? Sabuku Sushi is hosting a sushi making class where students will learn the basic skills for making sushi at home. Attendees will make three different rolls and take home their own makisu mat. Bikes, Boards, and BrewsWhere: Crown Point Park; Cost: - Celebrate delicious brews and the beach life in Pacific Beach during Bikes, Boards, and Brews, featuring some of San Diego's best craft beer brewers, food pairings from local PB restaurants, a bike show, local art, and more.49th Chicano Park Day CelebrationWhere: Chicano Park; Cost: FreeThe Logan Heights community will celebrate the 49th annual Chicano Park Day at the famed park underneath the Coronado Bridge. The free festival brings together community members annually for art, education, entertainment, and honoring Chicano culture and the park.Cabrillo Fee Free DayWhere: Cabrillo National Monument; Cost: FreeFor the first day of National Park Week, enjoy access to Cabrillo National Monument for free and check out one of San Diego's most scenic parks, offering a look into California history where Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo stepped foot on the country's West Coast. Visitors can also enjoy access to the low-tide pools and Old Point Loma Lighthouse.SUNDAYEaster Bash at Belmont ParkWhere: Belmont Park; Cost: FreeBelmont park will bring back its annual East Bash with egg hunts, Easter activities, and photos with the Easter bunny, live music and more fun at the park.Easter Sunday at the DelWhere: Hotel del Coronado; Cost: - 0Celebrate Easter Sunday at the Hotel del Coronado, with where the hotel will host a petting zoo, Easter service, and more fun for kids on the Paseo Lawn with an egg dye station, clothing for sale, and more.Lilac FestivalWhere: Fort Cross Old Timey Adventures; Cost: - (Saturday - Sunday) Five acres of lilacs can be enjoyed in Santa Ysabel at Fort Cross Old Timey Adventures, where the Lilac Festival hosts flowers for sale, hayrides, hoedowns, a petting zoo, a reptile show, tomahawk throwing, and much more. Reservations for activities is highly recommended.CatsWhere: San Diego Civic Theater; Cost: Starting at (Thursday - Sunday) It's the final weekend to catch CATS at the San Diego Civic Theater. The Tony Award-winning musical tells the story of one extraordinary night when a tribe of cats gather for its annual ball and must decide which cat gets to be reborn.San Diego Zoo giant pandas farewell partyWhere: San Diego Zoo; Cost: Free with park admission(Thursday - Sunday) The San Diego Zoo will celebrate their giant pandas Bai Yun and her son, Xiao Liwu, before the two are brought to China. Zoo visitors can see the pandas at their habitat leading up to their departure, and the park will be selling special commemorative bells and offering free tags to hang on the Giant Panda Friendship Wall. 5582

  中山痔疮护理   

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — The Port of San Diego announced Wednesday they've selected a developer for a new pod hotel concept near San Diego Bay.STAY OPEN was chosen to develop and operate the new low-cost, pod-style hotel concept that would be located on Pacific Highway between the Port's administration building and Palm Street.The concept envisions 33 rooms with eight to 12 pods per room. Each pod would include a single-occupancy bed, storage locker, power supply, ventilation control, privacy screen, and free Wi-Fi. Rooms would share one bathroom with shower facilities. In total, the concept would include 220 individual pods.RELATED: City aims to start bidding to construct East Village Green park this summerSix rooms with private bathrooms and queen and twin beds would be included in the hotel. And space on the hotel's rooftop would be reserved for a restaurant, bar, and outdoor seating open to the public.An exact price for an overnight stay in a pod was not released, but STAY OPEN partner JUCY Snooze offers the pod rentals in New Zealand starting at about per night.The goal behind to concept is to offer an inexpensive for travelers, similar to a hostel. It's not clear if the pods will be designed similarly to JUCY's New Zealand hotel."STAY OPEN’s innovative ‘shared hospitality’ concept really stood out, as it is geared towards the traveler that is looking to stay in prime locations without breaking the bank or sacrificing the experience," Chairman Garry Bonelli, Port of San Diego Board of Port Commissioners, said. "The STAY OPEN team has a successful track record of developing and operating high quality, lower-cost overnight accommodations globally. We look forward to having them as a partner."The Port will now begin negotiations with STAY OPEN to build the proposed concept. Port officials hope to return to the Board of Port Commissioners by the end of the year to begin the environmental review process for the hotel. 1957

  

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- The parents of more than 600 migrant children still haven’t been found, more than two and a half years after thousands of children were separated from their parents at the border.The separations happened from 2017 to 2018, as part of President Trump’s zero tolerance policy.According to a tweet from the ACLU, the parents of 666 migrant children have not been found, that number is over 100 more than what was reported during a court hearing in late October.The zero tolerance policy started in 2017, when over 2,700 children were separated from their parents after crossing the U.S. - Mexico border. The policy was ended by San Diego federal Judge Dana Sabraw in 2018.Last month, the same judge asked the Trump administration to do more to help find the children’s parents.Richard Villasana is the founder of Forever Homes for Foster Kids, a San Diego charity that helps locate families of children in the U.S. foster care system, often times working in Latin American countries.“Some of these children will never be reunited with their parents because there was just not enough information to work with,” says Villasana.The ACLU says the children’s parents are believed to be in their home countries. Villasana says the process of finding relatives in other countries is very complicated, often times only having a last name or a city to work with. Other times, Villasana says, volunteers have to depend on the child’s memory for information, which can be challenging if they are too young.“Depending upon their age, they’re probably not going to be of any help to help the attorneys with ACLU and those non-profits to connect them to their parents,” explains Villasana.As reunification efforts continue, Villasana expects that it will be years before these children’s parents are found and he says it’s likely some will never be located.Another court hearing is scheduled in San Diego on December 4th. 1932

  

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — There are still many unknowns surrounding SARS-CoV-2, the official name of the new coronavirus, but almost from the beginning one thing has been clear: people with underlying health conditions are more at-risk.San Diego County Health officials released new data this month showing which underlying conditions pose the greatest risk of death from COVID-19, based on the number of times a condition was listed on death certificates and other medical records.Among the 626 COVID deaths recorded in San Diego County as of Tuesday, 96 percent of the victims had at least one underlying condition. Only 4 percent, or 27 people, died without evidence of an underlying condition.Hypertension (high blood pressure) -- listed in 50% of deathsDiabetes -- 35%Cardiac Disease -- 31%Dementia/Alzheimer’s -- 27%Chronic Kidney Disease -- 18%COPD/Asthma -- 13%Obesity -- 8%Immunocompromised -- 5%No underlying condition -- 4%So what makes these conditions more risky than others? It may have to do with the prevalence of these conditions in the population and the way SARS-CoV-2 attacks the body, according to Sharp Rees-Stealy physician Dr. Abisola Olulade.Scientists are still scrambling to understand exactly how SARS-CoV-2 attacks and kills patients, but emerging research offers some theories.It starts when virus particles enter a person’s nose or mouth. The coronavirus makes it way towards the lungs first, and the immune system tries to fight it, causing inflammation along the way that can lead to pneumonia.People with hypertension and diabetes, the top two underlying conditions in San Diego County’s data, often have existing damage to their blood vessels.Based on early studies, scientists theorize the virus may be causing more damage to the vessel through inflammation and clotting, or outright attacking the blood vessels themselves.On top of that, hypertension is common: “Almost half of all adults in the United States have hypertension,” Dr. Olulade said. “45 percent.”Patients with cardiac disease, like coronary heart disease and congestive heart failure, have existing damage to their heart.Early research shows the coronavirus can cause inflammation of the heart muscle. It might also damage the heart indirectly, as the fight with the immune system in the lungs lowers oxygen levels in the blood.“If your heart isn’t pumping enough oxygen out to the blood, that amplifies the risk and the threat of dying from COVID,” Dr. Olulade said.Patients with dementia, the fourth most common condition on the list, already have an elevated risk of dying from pneumonia, one of the calling cards of a severe COVID-19 infection. People with diabetes also have a risk of pneumonia. In fact, the risk is so high, the CDC recommends patients with diabetes get a pneumonia vaccination.For individuals with chronic kidney disease, scientists aren’t yet sure if the virus attacks the kidneys directly or the kidneys get hit with collateral damage from other body system failures.Regardless of the underlying condition, Dr. Olulade said taking steps to treat and keep it under control can greatly reduce your risk from the coronavirus.Individuals with mild or controlled asthma, for example, are not considered to be at higher risk of severe illness, she said.San Diego County’s list does not include two underlying conditions considered high risk by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: cancer and sickle cell disease.That might be because the 626 deaths are a small sample size, Dr. Olulade said. 3525

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