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esslie Severns first attended in 2017, when she had just gotten out of the military.Severns said when she walked into the room that day, she began to cry. “This makes you feel so good, that people care about you, that they go this far to donate all their clothes, and it just makes you feel empowered and ready to go back out and face this new life that you’re about to experience,” she said.Operation Dress Code also offers free make-up lessons, professional headshots and career workshops.San Diego's Courage to Call, CalVet and dozens of local businesses and organizations work together to host the annual event. 1107
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - May is Maritime Month in San Diego and the best chance to learn all about San Diego Bay's regional importance for free!The Port of San Diego will offer free tours as part of its annual Maritime Month celebration. During May, the Port offers free bus and boat tours of San Diego Bay.Bus tours depart from Pepper Park in National City and will take guests on a tour of San Diego's shipbuilding and repair yards, the Tenth Avenue Marine Terminal (where the Dole ship often is) and National City Marine Terminal.RELATED: San Diego museum members get in free during 'Big Exchange'Bus tours are set for May 17 and 24 at 10 a.m. Seating is limited.Boat tours will depart on Hornblower vessels from Pier 1 in San Diego and travel through scenic San Diego Bay.Tours bring passengers to San Diego's shipbuilding and repair yard, and Tenth Ave. and National City terminals as well. The tour will also stop at the Port's Marine cargo terminal.RELATED: National Bike Month kicks off in San DiegoBoat tour dates are set for May 19 and 20 at 10:45 a.m. and 1:15 p.m. each day.For more information or to RSVP, visit the Port's website. 1156

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - In preparation for one of the most advanced fighter jets in the world, Marine Corps Air Station Miramar is planning security upgrades to its airfield perimeter fence.10News discovered it’s one of nine large-scale construction projects that Miramar will be doing over the next decade."These construction projects here are what enables, that is what brings our national defense policy and strategy to reality," said Public Works Officer Lt. Commander Travis Brinkman.Currently being built in the heart of MCAS Miramar is a 160,000 square foot hangar is designed to hold up to 12 F-35s.It's the first of three hangars planned for the location."The need to provide modern facilities as well as the F-35 has specific requirements, specific systems that need different maintenance, different capabilities within the facility itself to provide that maintenance,” said Brinkman. According to a post on the Federal Business Opportunities website, MCAS Miramar is also looking to replace more than 24,000 feet of existing chain link fence, vehicle gates, and swing arm barriers.According to the site, “The project magnitude is ,000,000 to ,000,000.”"We're upgrading the fence line around the airfield itself, and it’s simply to ensure that our fence line is complying with the security requirements for the F-35,” said Brinkman. "This brings Miramar, puts it on the forefront of national defense and national defense strategy,” said MCAS Miramar Director of Communications Capt. Matthew Gregory.According to officials, the Marine Corps will eventually transition its entire tactical air fleet to F-35 to include three legacy platforms: the AV-8B Harrier, the F/A-18 Hornet, and the EA-6B Prowler.They tell us the aircraft combines next-generation fighter characteristics of radar-evading stealth, supersonic speed, fighter agility, and advanced logistical support. It also has a different sound, one anyone nearby will notice."Once they get out here to California, most notable to the community, one you're going to see a different plane flying but two its going to sound a little different,” said Gregory. “It's not necessarily louder than the F-18’s, but it's got a different pitch because it's got a different engine on it.”The price tag for all the projects scheduled in the next decade is around half a billion dollars.Military officials believe it will save money in the long run and offer a longer lifespan.The hangar should be ready to receive the new aircraft around January 2020. 2510
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - It was more than a decade after two-year-old Jahi Turner disappeared.His mother, Tameka, had been posted on deployment with the U.S. Navy in 2002. Step-dad Tieray Jones claimed the boy vanished while playing with other kids at a park in Golden Hill, while Jones was buying a drink at a vending machine.Police thought otherwise, suspicious that Jones had severely punished the boy for bed-wetting and he died. The body never to be found.RELATED: Stepfather facing trial in Jahi Turner murderTameka called Tieray with detectives listening in."The accident ... is something that's an accident, ya know. Anything else what happened would have to be supposedly my fault," Tameka said.Tameka explained that she no longer trusted Tieray, saying, "I'm learning all this information that had I known years ago ... I'm sorry."RELATED: Trial begins for stepfather accused in disappearance, death of Jahi TurnerThe trial will resume o February 20. 977
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Local activists are accusing the city of San Diego of slow-playing their proposal to create an independent commission on police practices - to the point that it died.The measure would have created a board with subpoena power. And the ability to launch its own investigations.The board, which would have been called the Independent Commission Police Practices, would have addressed several of the concerns raised by the County Grand Jury about the city's Community Review Board.Those concerns include a lack of subpoena power, access to only some complaints, and an appearance some find too closely linked to the San Diego Police Department. Women Occupy San Diego's proposed an independent board that would have subpoena power."We would have independent investigators who would talk to the witnesses, who would look at all the documents, who would do the same things that (Internal Affairs) does," said Kate Yavenditti, a local attorney and one of the group's members.Women Occupy San Diego filed the measure in March, but earlier this month the City Attorney's said the San Diego Police Officers Association and the Municipal Employees Association needed to be consulted before it could go to the November ballot, due to a law called the Meyers Milias Brown Act.A city attorney memo said the the organizations needed to be conferred with because the measure could impact their working conditions.Yavenditti said she learned of this at a rules committee meeting on July 11, and the City Council didn't docket the issue until Monday, just less than two weeks before the Registrar of Voters deadline for the November ballot.It was too close, so the council voted not to move it forward."At this point, there's nothing we can do about it except talk about what we believe was a deliberate delay," Yavenditti said. A city spokeswoman said this measure was treated the same as all the others that were vying for the November ballot. Jack Schaeffer, president of the San Diego Police Officers Association, said he stood by the current Community Review Board. He noted it has trained experts doing investigations, they pick apart all the evidence and come to appropriate conclusions."It's almost like a big audit of what we’ve done as investigators," he said. "If you look nationwide, a few different ways to do police oversight and not one of them is really any better the other."Yavenditti said her group is now eyeing the proposal for the 2020 ballot. 2489
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