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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Alcohol giant Constellation Brands is bidding bon voyage to San Diego-born Ballast Point.The company announced Tuesday it will be selling Ballast Point Brewing Company to Chicago-based Kings & Convicts Brewing Company for an undisclosed amount. Under the terms of the sale, Kings & Convicts will acquire the Ballast Point brand and its various production facilities and brewpubs, including its Downtown Disney, Long Beach, Miramar, and Little Italy locations, and its newest brewpub in Chicago.RELATED: San Diego craft beer study shows craft brewery, economic impact growthThe new owner will also acquire Ballast Point's original homebrewing supply and tasting room in Linda Vista.Kings & Convicts said it plans to keep Ballast Point's existing workforce, or about 560 employees, and to add a sales and marketing workforce.“We’re excited to welcome the team at Ballast Point into the Kings & Convicts family,” said Brendan Watters, Kings & Convicts’ chief executive officer. “We have long admired the quality and spirit of Ballast Point’s brands and team. Ballast Point’s best-in-class brewing standards will remain unchanged, delivering the same high-quality, award-winning products the company has become known for over the years."RELATED: Museum of Beer planned to open in San Diego's East VillageThe sale is expected to close by the end of the 2020 fiscal year.Craft beer fans will remember when Constellation Brands shelled out about billion to buy Ballast Point in 2015, a move intended to position the company well in the quickly-growing craft beer market.Since the purchase, Constellation Brands CEO Bill Newlands says the craft beer market has "shifted dramatically."“Trends in the U.S. craft beer segment have shifted dramatically since our acquisition of Ballast Point,” said Newlands. “Ballast Point remains one of the most iconic craft beer brands in the country and we’re pleased to transition the business to an owner that can devote the resources needed to fuel its future success.”Newlands added that the sale allows Constellation to focus on its other brands and upcoming products, pointing specifically to a Corona-branded hard seltzer. 2205
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- About 40 demonstrators aired grievances Tuesday at the last San Diego City Council meeting of 2019, although not explicitly in the spirit of Festivus.The protesters, largely from the Racial Justice Coalition of San Diego, highlighted a range of concerns including homelessness, affordable housing, police tactics, smart street lights, racial bias and more. Much of the demonstrators’ criticism was aimed directly at Mayor Kevin Faulconer, who is entering his final year in office and was not in council chambers Tuesday morning. Faulconer’s office did not respond to a request for comment.RELATED: City Council approves inclusionary housing amendments"Airing of grievances" is the opening ceremony of the fictional holiday Festivus, featured in the television sitcom "Seinfeld."Protesters ended their demonstration with actors reading a spoof of “A Christmas Carol” by Charles Dickens, in which a “Mayor Scrooge” is visited by the Ghosts of Homelessness Past, Present and Future.San Diego leaders have grappled with homelessness throughout 2019. Last April, San Diego’s Regional Task Force on the Homeless Point-In-Time Count survey put the county's homeless population total at 8,102, with 4,476 unsheltered people and 3,626 sheltered people in the county.RELATED: City Council passes controversial affordable housing planSince the count, downtown tent shelters and overnight parking lots have been established to help address the issue.In October, the city council unanimously approved a 10-year, .9-billion plan to address homelessness through a series of initiatives. Plans include making more than 5,400 housing units available for homeless residents, providing more housing assistance services, and creating a leadership council. The city's plan also adopts three-year goals to halve San Diego's unsheltered homeless population and eliminate homelessness among youth and military veterans. 1925
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — An El Cajon woman watched in disbelief Sunday night as her Amazon package was stolen by the very people who delivered it. Cheryl Cook broke her ankle over the weekend and ordered a large ice pack off Amazon. She chose same-day delivery so that she could start icing her ankle as soon as possible.Cook was able to track the driver’s location and could see when he had arrived at her home. She says the delivery started off strangely when the driver put the package on the front lawn rather than the porch. He then got back in the car, put his flashers on, and drove a few feet up the street. Moments later, a second person got out of the car and stole the package. “I’m injured, I’m home, I can’t get out my own front door, and then my package is stolen by the guy who dropped it off,” said Cook. She shared the video online and heard similar stories. “I wanted people to know what was going on, there might be other people that have lost packages and wondered where they went, and this was very clear-cut; it went right back in the guy’s car.”In a statement to 10News, Amazon said:“This does not reflect the high standards we have for delivery partners. This individual is no longer delivering Amazon packages, and we have reached out to the customer to make things right.”A spokesperson went on to tell 10News that their Amazon Flex delivery partners are thoroughly vetted through a comprehensive, multi-state criminal background check and a review of their motor vehicle records. They say the person who stole Cook’s package passed their background check and delivered Amazon packages for less than a month. Cook was refunded for the ice pack but says she’ll never get back the time and frustration spent over the matter. 1750
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — A teenager was injured after jumping from an Uber driver's vehicle on Interstate 8 in Mission Valley late Tuesday.The 13-year-old boy, who's from Yucalan, Mexico, was traveling on westbound Interstate 8 in an Uber ordered by his father at about 9:20 p.m., according to San Diego CHP officials. Due to a language barrier with the Uber driver, the teenager decided to jump from the vehicle on the transition ramp to northbound State route 163, CHP officials said.The teen was taken to Rady Children's Hospital with minor injuries, according to San Diego Police.Based on the statements taken by officers, CHP said they are not pursuing the incident as a criminal matter at this time. 707
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - An oft-deported immigrant who was charged in a DUI, hit-and-run crash that injured a young boy in the South Bay will not be tried for the third time.A judge ruled Friday to dismiss the case against 39-year-old Constantino Banda Acosta. Banda was charged with driving under the influence and fleeing the scene of a hit-and-run on Camino de la Plaza in San Ysidro on May 6, 2017.Investigators said Banda ran a stop sign and crashed his pickup truck into the Lake family’s Honda Accord, as they were heading home from Disneyland. Lennox Lake, 7, was injured in the back seat of the car, suffering serious head injuries.RELATED COVERAGE: 670