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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — City Council leaders have approved a draft agreement to sell the Mission Valley stadium site to San Diego State University.Leaders unanimously approved an agreement to move forward with a Purchase and Sale Agreement (PSA) between the city and SDSU to sell the land to the university for .2 million.The agreement paves the way for the city to meet for two hearings to finalize the PSA on June 9 and June 23. After the hearings, a 30-day referendum period is legally required before Mayor Kevin Faulconer can sign the PSA and escrow can be initiated. SDSU expects to take ownership of the property in late July 2020, according to the city."Both parties wanted to get this done right, and the time and thoughtfulness put into this agreement have created a final product San Diegans can be proud of," Mayor Faulconer said. "This agreement is fair and equitable, and I want to thank Council President Gomez, City Attorney Elliott and SDSU for their commitment."The agreement is the product of 18 months of negotiating following the passage of Measure G in November 2018. The voter-approved measure calls for the expansion of SDSU, a new stadium, 80 acres of park and open space, and 4,600 market-rate and affordable housing units."We have reached a pivotal milestone moment. SDSU Mission Valley will be a true revitalization of public land in all aspects of the plan," SDSU President Adela de la Torre said. "We are thrilled to take this critical next step toward closing the sale and creating generational opportunities for all San Diegans."Chris Thomas, a graduate student at SDSU who recently earned his bachelor's degree from the school, said he believed the project would take the university to a new level. "The biggest impact that it's going to create is for the student experience," he said. "It's going to engage a lot more students, it's going to be able to bring in more students to SDSU and really engage in that culture of learning."The council called its special meeting Friday after intense negotiations, including an 11-hour marathon day earlier in the week. City and university negotiators were going back and forth on more than a dozen key points, including environmental and legal liability. "The two sides locked arms and said 'Hey, we got to work through these things,' and we did it in a very cooperative manner," said John Kratzer, of JMI realty, a consultant to SDSU.City Councilman Scott Sherman, whose district includes Mission Valley, said the best negotiations are ones where both sides leave the table not entirely happy."Neither side gets everything that they want, he said. "I think that's where we are here today."If all goes as planned, the new stadium would be ready for the 2022 Aztec football season. 2762
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Bea Pesenti recently moved back to Italy after living in San Diego for more than a decade, now she and her fiance are quarantined in their apartment."I do worry about if this continues, how can we afford to live? How anyone can afford to live if you're not working," Pesenti asked.For the last two weeks she has been unable to work or leave her home, unless it's to get groceries.RELATED: FDA approves San Diego company's new coronavirus test-kit"We’ve been on lock down since March ninth," she said. "The issue that I’m starting to feel is there’s no light at the end of the tunnel."Italy's death toll has risen to more than 4,000. Pesenti said every hour she would hear ambulance sirens driving by her home, a painful reminder of the devastation caused by the coronavirus."Had we done things differently, maybe we would be looking at that end of the tunnel," she said. "As a person from Milan, I could have never imagined a city like this being shut down like that."RELATED: Nurses plead for help during coronavirus pandemicPesenti believe if they had social distancing and orders to stay home earlier, things may have been different."We didn't have any examples," she explained. "Now there are examples out there of what you can do that is right and what you shouldn’t do."She's urging loved ones in San Diego to take any public health orders seriously.RELATED: What's the difference? Cold vs. flu vs. coronavirus symptoms"I worry a lot about where San Diego is headed, where the United States, and where so many other countries are headed," she said. "It’s a huge temporary sacrifice for a lot of us, whether its losing our job, not seeing family, but it will only get us out of it sooner."The U.S. State Department issued a level four travel advisory Thursday, asking American citizens to avoid traveling internationally or immediately return to the U.S. if they are already overseas, or possibly prepare to remain abroad for an indefinite amount of time.Pensti said she and her fiance already planned to stay in Italy. RELATED: San Diego COVID-19 trackerThey are clinging on to hope that their lives may return to normal, and they will be able to celebrate their wedding in September and his graduation in December.For now, she leaves San Diegans with this message, "Just act responsibly, take this seriously, stay home, it's a small sacrifice but it's the only way." 2400

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - As the world grieves the loss of Aretha Franklin, a local woman is recalling her final and historic San Diego concert on Shelter Island.Linda Moody is the widow of saxophone legend James Moody, who died in 2010. In 2005 during a newspaper interview, an excited Franklin, in town for a concert, learned Moody lived in San Diego. Moody was one of Franklin's idols.The Union-Tribune's music critic called Moody and extended Franklin's invite to sing with her that night.RELATED: 507
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Congressman Duncan Hunter and wife, Margaret, were arraigned Thursday in San Diego, where they entered their pleas to a 60-count indictment surrounding charges of campaign fund violations.Here are five fast facts to know about Thursday's arraignment:HUNTERS' PLEAThe Hunters both pleaded not guilty to the indictment handed down on Wednesday. Rep. Hunter has continued to plead innocent to charges against him since they were introduced in 2016.This week, Rep. Hunter called the indictment a "politically motivated" attack.HUNTER INDICTMENT: 573
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - City leaders announced a new overnight parking lot on Tuesday for people living in their vehicles.It comes a day before the city committee on Safety and Livable Neighborhoods will vote on a new ordinance that would create restrictions on vehicle habitation.Living in a vehicle has been legal since a federal judge filed an injunction against the city’s law last August, saying it was too vague.The new ordinance would restrict living in vehicles within 500 feet of a school or residence at all hours of the day. It would also make it illegal to live in a vehicle from 6 pm to 6 am anywhere in the city, except in the approved lots. “The city cannot solve the problem, so their tactic is, “let’s hide it,’“ said Caesar, a man who lives in his van and wished to withhold his last name because he is currently looking for a job.He said he used to have a stable living situation but fell on hard times after paying for his two kids college tuition. Then he lost his job. “They offered to help me, but I said ‘no,’ I don’t want to be a boulder in your life.”Caesar said, he may end up using the new city parking lot in Mission Valley, but he worries that if the new ordinance passes, he still may be ticketed by police.“The tactic is, let’s load them with citations,” speculated Caesar. 1308
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