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DEL MAR, Calif. (KGTV) - The San Diego County Fair brings a new lineup of OzSome food for 2019 at the Del Mar Fairgrounds. Your usual fair favorites are back, like Chicken Charlie’s and Bacon-A-Fair… for bacon-wrapped everything. But bring your appetite: there are new offerings you won't want to miss.The tasty treats are designed to match the “Wizard of Oz” theme. PHOTOS: See the San Diego County Fair Food slideshow OzSome Crunch Roll (Country Fair Cinnamon Rolls with frosting and Cinnamon Toast Crunch cereal)Deep-fried creme brulee Buffalo chicken chimichangaFlying Monkey Caramel Corn (Caramel corn with banana chips)Hot Cheetos PotatoRuby Red LemonadeCandy Funnel CakeYellow Brick and Red Brick SmoothiesFried Bacon PlantainsBlizzard of Oz Frozen Hot ChocolateEmerald City Pizza BallsScarecrow DogOver the Rainbow Summer SaladMunchkin Eggs (Deviled eggs with bacon, cheddar, and chives)Good Witch/Wicked Witch ToastYou’ll be able to enjoy your favorite fair foods from May 31 through July 4.COMPLETE COVERAGE:Off to see the Wizard: What to know for the San Diego County FairFollow the yellow brick road: Parking at the San Diego County FairSan Diego County Fair admission discounts, freebies, deals — oh my!'Oz-some' concerts heading to San Diego County Fair this summer 1287
DANA POINT, Calif. (KGTV) – Over the weekend, hundreds of people, celebrities, and professional athletes participated in the Sheckler Foundation's 3rd annual Gala and 10th Annual Celebrity Golf Tournament, held at the Monarch Beach Resort & Golf Links.The two-day event sponsored by Oakley raised 0,000 for the “Be the Change” initiative which contributes to the many causes that benefit and enrich the lives of children and injured action sports athletes.Those in attendance included Machine Gun Kelly (MGK), Avenged Sevenfold, three-time NBA All-Star Klay Thompson, and professional football players, Reggie Bush and Ryan Mathews. 647
DAVIS, Calif. (AP) — A tornado touched down in a California field as weekend thunderstorms swept through the central part of the state, dropping rain and dime-sized hail, forecasters said.Cellphone video posted online showed a towering vortex spinning Saturday evening near Davis.National Weather Service forecaster Emily Heller told the San Francisco Chronicle that there was no damage. Tornadoes in the Central Valley aren't entirely unusual and are "weaker and more short-lived" than ones typically seen in the Midwest, she said.Saturday's storm blanketed some roadways with hail in and around Solano County. More stormy conditions were possible Sunday evening.To the east, forecasters issued a winter weather advisory after several inches of snow fell in the Sierra Nevada.Heller called it "the first real snow of the season."Elevations of 6,000 feet (1,800 meters) and above recorded up to 4 inches (10 centimeters) of fresh powder on Saturday. More snow was forecast for Sunday into Monday and the highest mountain peaks could see up to 6 inches (15 centimeters).The severe weather is the result of a cold front over the Pacific Northwest that is spinning out waves of unstable air as it moves east, Heller told the newspaper. 1240
DALLAS (AP) — The Texas Supreme Court has denied a Republican-led petition to toss nearly 127,000 ballots cast at drive-thru voting places in the Houston area. The state's all-Republican high court on Sunday rejected the request from GOP activists and candidates without explaining its decision. The effort to have the Harris County ballots thrown out is still set to be taken up during an emergency hearing in federal court on Monday. Conservative Texas activists have railed against expanded voting access in Harris County, where a record 1.4 million early votes have already been cast. 596
DENVER, Colo. — The mission of the nonprofit GrowHaus is to create community-driven food systems by serving as a hub for food production, distribution and education.Karla Olivas is a promotora, which is a community health worker that is active within Latinx populations across the U.S.“We educate persons about healthy food and about making medicine out of plants or herbs,” Olivas said.During the pandemic, GrowHaus has been delivering boxes of food to families in need.“Flour, sugar, chips or popcorn, beans, tortillas, the vegetables we get from our donations and sometimes it’s milk, eggs,” Olivas said.According to Feeding America – a nationwide network of food banks that provides emergency food assistance to millions of people every year – the pandemic has worsened the problem of food insecurity.“Food insecurity means you’re facing hunger," said Feeding America's Zuani Villarreal. "It means you may not know how to provide food for your family.”Villarreal says four in ten people are turning to food banks who never had to before.“The USDA said that there’s 35 million people that were food insecure before the pandemic," Villarreal said. "Using our Map the Meal Gap study, and evaluating annualized poverty rates and unemployment rates, we are projecting that this year because of the pandemic we will see 50 million people in the U.S. that are facing hunger.”Many of those are people in Latinx populations. A report from Feeding America explains Latino individuals are almost twice as likely to live in food insecure households compared to non-Hispanic white individuals. Villarreal says that will likely get even worse after all the job loss this year.“We know that at the peak, the Latinos unemployment rate was higher than any other demographic group, the service industry and the travel and hospitality industry. They’re disproportionally employed by people of color, and so those are the jobs that have been going away or have been reduced because of the pandemic,” Villarreal said.Olivas adds a lot of them are immigrants who likely don’t have unemployment or insurance benefits.“When they cut the hours or they stop businesses and they cannot work, they cannot get enough money to put food on the table,” Olivas said.To combat the systemic problem, Olivas says they are trying to empower Latinx populations to rely on each other for services to keep money in the community, whether it’s sewing a dress or making food to sell to a neighbor.“We are going to keep working with the community remotely," Olivas said. "We have been planning our classes online to keep teaching people how to grow their own vegetables.”Villarreal says Feeding America is also doing what it can to help people of color.“For us as a network, what we are doing is we are looking at those community that are more severely impacted, and looking to funnel resources to those food banks and those communities to provide additional support,” Villarreal said.Anybody else who would like to extend a helping hand is encouraged to donate food, funds, or time as a volunteer, whether it be for GrowHaus, Feeding America, or another local food bank in your area. Olivas says offering a necessity like food, helps families build a better life for their children.“It is something like, we’re taking one thing from their back to worry about – now OK we have food this week, so we can focus on other things," Olivas said. "And focus on their kids because most of the families, both parents work, and they work all day." 3506