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(KGTV) -- The state’s Department of Motor Vehicles is reopening its remaining field offices that were shut down due to the COVID-19 pandemic.Starting Thursday, June 11, 169 DMV locations across California will reopen for customers that have appointments and provide service for limited transactions that require an in-person visit.DMV field offices were closed in March due to the coronavirus pandemic but select locations around the state began reopening in May with limited service.Although field offices will reopen, many services -- including behind-the-wheel drive tests – are not available for the time being. Officials said behind-the-wheel testing will return in the coming weeks.DMV officials are urging customers to continue “to use its online services, expanded virtual services and other service channels to complete transactions, including eligible driver license and vehicle registration renewals.”Among the limited services being offered at field offices:Paying registration for an impounded vehicle due to registration-related issuesReinstating a suspended or revoked river licensepplying for a reduced-fee or no-fee identification cardProcessing commercial driver license transactionsApplying for a disabled person parking placardsAdding ambulance certificate or firefighter endorsement to a driver licenseVerifying transit training document to drive transit busProcess DMV express customers for REAL ID transactions, if time and space allowVehicle verificationsDMV officials said the department is rescheduling any appointments that were canceled during the closure and notifying customers of new appointment dates.At each field office, employees will be wearing face coverings, practicing physical distancing protocols, and will have access to disinfecting wipes, hand sanitizer, field shields, gloves, and soap and water.All customers will be required to wear a face covering and remain at least six feet apart from others when in line. Officials said, “Customers are offered a text message that will allow them to wait outside the building until notified they are ready to be served. Entry into the building is metered, and customers may experience extended wait times.” 2199
...Chris will do a GREAT job! Mark Esper has been terminated. I would like to thank him for his service.— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) November 9, 2020 165

“Fair Oaks Farms Dairy Adventure operators educate their guests that dairy cows on their farms enjoy comfort and relaxation due to their innovative carousel milking system. This couldn't be further from the truth. The Fair Oaks Farms and Fairlife adult cows live in sheer misery. Deprived of simple medical care, aid, and any form of compassion, the mother cows live sad, painful lives in the hands of Fairlife. Fairlife and the dairy industry are the last true concentration camps left on earth.” 505
(KGTV) -- The 75-year-old pilot who was killed when his small passenger plane crashed in Northern California Friday night has been identified as Carl Morrison of Fallbrook. Sonoma County Sheriff's Office responded to a call from the US Air Force at about 6:40 p.m. reporting an emergency transponder activation from a small passenger plane in the city of Petaluma, about 40 miles north of San Francisco. Deputies were dispatched to the location but were unable to locate the plane."Around the same time, a woman from San Diego County had called Petaluma PD and reported her husband was overdue home," said Sgt. Spencer Crum of the Sonoma County Sheriff's Office.Shortly after 10:00 PM deputies spotted a small fire in a remote ravine near the 3600 block of Manor Lane, Crum said. Deputies reached the location of the fire and discovered the downed aircraft and the body of a man believed to be the pilot.The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating the cause of the crash.Morrison was believed to have left the Petaluma Airport en route to San Diego County in his Mooney M20 fix winged airplane, the sheriff's office said.Bob Morrison, Carl Morrison's oldest son, said that Carl Morrison was a retired U.S. Marine who served twenty years. He was also the Region Vice Commander of the Fallbrook Senior Squadron 87 Civil Air Patrol. He served with them since 2006.In addition to being a father of six, he was a lawyer who owned an environmental consulting company, Bob Morrison said. He was in Northern California on business, returning home, when his plane crashed. Bob Morrison said his father had been flying for 20 years, which was a lifelong dream of his. "He left his mark wherever he went in a positive way," Bob Morrison said. 1794
“When we got here it was a beach community," said Susan Gutierrez as she and her husband, German, walked with me toward the entrance of the Shipley-Magee house; a turn-of-century cottage at Beech and Carlsbad blvds, among the first in the area to take advantage of building materials delivered by train.“The trains came through in the mid-1880s, about 1883," Said gutierrez, "And that enabled people to start building wood structures. Prior to that the ranch houses were primarily made out of adobe.”Gutierrez is president of the Carlsbad Historical Society which now resides in the Shipley-Magee house; named for Florence Shipley who bequeathed it to the city in 1974.“We had one family who lived here from the 1890s to the mid-1970s," said Gutierrez referring to the Shipleys as she toured me through the home, "So we feel free to interpret a broad time period.”The house is now a time capsule of personal treasures documenting the history of Carlsbad back to the 1880s, when four investors (the town founders), bought up 400 acres of open land that included a prized a well dug by local farmer, Captain John A. Frazier. "You have to go through a lot of soil, rock, clay to sink well," said Gutierrez, noting the difficulty of the work. Frazier dug down some 500 feet before discovering two Artesian springs containing alkaline water of such quality, word spread they even had healing powers. The springs also reminded the founders of another world renown water source in eastern Europe."They chose that name Carlsbad based on water that was found close to the train tracks," said Gutierrez, "It had similar properties to Karlsbad, spelled with a 'K,' in what is now Czechoslovakia."In the 1880s Carlsbad, California grew in fame with its own water source, spurring construction of a hotel and spa. But Gutierrez said the dream nearly dried up with years of drought. "From 1890 to 1906 we're pretty much dead in the water - so to speak!" While many moved out during the drought years, Susan said that's when the Shipley family moved in. "This was in part because Mr. Shipley had very fragile health and he wanted to live in a place that was beneficial for his health."And Gutierrez said it must have worked, as Mr. Shipley lived into his 80s. The family home remains a near living tribute, furnished as it might have been when the Shipley family was there. “She actually wore the clothing that we're looking at here?” I asked, looking at one dress on display. “Yes," said Gutierrez, "All of these are Florence's items.”Intricate sewing projects and hand written family letters among the heirlooms. The penmanship artful. The subject matter -at least for the letter we perused, practical, as Florence wrote her mother about the need for new driving gloves. Perhaps to drive a one horse buggy in the backyard barn shown to me by Susan's husband, German. Also in the barn a humorous looking bird about five feet tall."It's almost like a plaster isn't it?" I asked German, looking closely at it. "Yea this is like a fiberglass, like a surfboard, " he said.The creation was actually one of the "Twin chickens" that used to adorn the entrance to the nearby Twin Inns restaurant; run by the Ketner family from 1919 to the mid 1980s. A registry from the business -that's on display in the main house- speaks to its fame. The book left open to a page with the signatures of Groucho Marx, Joan Crawford and Clark Gable. While carlsbad has a notable history back to the 1880s, it didn't actual become a city until 1952. "Our chamber of commerce had always been very strong," said Susan. "And when the county didn't do things for us before we were a city, the chamber provided for that." But she explained that the need for better fire protection and more water eventually convinced the community to incorporate. "They knew that in order to grow they had to be able to float bonds to connect to the new Colorado River water." And today the story of Carlsbad continues to be closely tied to water, as the city's desalination plant provides millions of gallons for the entire region everyday. As gutierrez summed up, "Water is absolutely essential for us, as a community to live, and also has a community to develop and go forward." The Carlsbad Historical Society at the Shipley-Magee House has much more to tell about the history of Carlsbad and this part of California. You can see it for yourself every Friday through Sunday. Donations are welcome. 4454
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