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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — "Friends" fans can relive their favorite show moments in a special brunch set for San Diego.The themed pop-up brunch, called "The One Where They All Went For Brunch," is being hosted by The Brunch Club, which organizes and hosts themed-brunches across the U.S. San Diego's two-hour "Friends" gathering is scheduled for May 24 at noon, though a location has yet to be disclosed.As for the menu, diners will enjoy a variety of drinks and playfully named appetizers, like Ross Gellar’s famous "moist maker" Thanksgiving leftover sandwiches — so grab your Thanksgiving pants.The brunch will also feature favorite episodes playing on a big screen, trivia with prizes, charades, and a costume competition for the best "Friends" dressed guests.Locals can sign up to be notified when tickets go on sale here. 828
iday by the state Employment Development Department.According to the EDD, total non-farm employment in San Diego County increased by 20,500 jobs -- from 1,350,800 to 1,371,300 -- while farm employment added 100 jobs, from 9,500 to 9,600.The coronavirus pandemic and related job losses loom large over the economy even as some industries resume business. The unemployment rate at this time last year was 3.4% and was just 3.1% in February, less than a third of the current rate.While the decreasing unemployment is a positive sign, it did arrive partially because fewer people are looking for work."Many San Diegans are battling difficult choices in the work-life balance," said Phil Blair, executive officer of Manpower West. "We are seeing companies offering high-paying jobs -- such as engineers and programmers -- and lower-paying jobs -- such as production line workers. The problem is that, whether someone can make or per hour, people are worried about safety and taking care of kids at home. Employers need to recognize employee concerns and meet them halfway."The data from the EDD does not reflect changing reopening tiers, or the fact that San Diego County could roll back reopenings by as soon as Tuesday because of rising COVID-19 numbers, which could throw the entire economy into a state similar to the months of March, April and May.Lynn Reaser, chief economist for the Fermanian Business & Economic Institute at Point Loma Nazarene University, said the county isn't out of trouble yet."Following the relatively good news from August, the job market could get much tougher as we move into fall," she said. "San Diego could be pushed back into California's purple zone, the most restrictive one for business based on the governor's new ranking for COVID-19 risk."The region's unemployment rate rose to a record 15% in May, according to EDD data, while data from the San Diego Association of Governments shows rates of nearly 30% in May.In August, the state's unemployment rate dropped to 11.6% from 13.7% and the nation's decreased to 8.5% from 10.5%.Government jobs led in local gains, with 6,800 jobs added to the region's total. Professional and business services gained 5,300 jobs, construction gained 3,100, trade, transportation and utilities 2,600, other services 1,200, educational and health services 1,000 and financial activities and manufacturing both gained 500 jobs.Leisure and hospitality and information were the only industries to post job losses, with 400 and 100 jobs lost, respectively.Comparing year-over-year, the San Diego region has lost 135,800 non- farm jobs and 400 agricultural jobs. Leisure and hospitality continue to top the list in jobs lost, with a total of 60,100 jobs lost since last August -- 43,900 of which came in accommodation and food services.Since the same time last year, trade, transportation and utilities shed 17,100 jobs, government lost 15,400, educational and health services 13,000, other services 12,000, manufacturing 7,200, information 3,800, construction 3,600, financial activities 3,300 and professional and business services lost 300 jobs. 3286
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - A 98-year-old woman is being evicted from her Ocean Beach home after living there for nearly three decades. Betty Morse moved into her tiny Ocean Beach cottage back in the late 1980’s. After her husband died, she needed a place she could afford. “I was by myself, but I managed,” Morse said. “I could walk to work.” Morse said the rent was about 0 when she moved in. “It was a beautiful place to live because you could walk to the beach and watch the sunset,” she said. This little place by the beach that fits her so well was supposed to be her last stop. "See, I figured I'd lived a wonderful life in Ocean Beach, and I want to live and die here, you know, because I feel so comfortable here,” Morse said. “It's my little house, and it's all I know.” Morse said this year she was asked to sign a new rental agreement. Her family had some disagreements with a couple of changes made by the landlord: one was a no-smoking addendum. Morse told 10News after decades of being a smoker at 98-years-old, she quit so she could stay in the home. Despite her efforts, she said after the attorneys went back and forth a few times, she received a 90-day-notice in July terminating her tenancy. Morse doesn't know what to do if she’s forced to leave. “I don’t know who will rent to me because in two months I’ll be 99 and they are not going to be happy to rent an apartment,” she said. During her 30 years at the property, Morse said she never had a problem with the rental. A fixture in the neighborhood, she knows San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer and his mother. "She said, 'Kevin, I want a picture of Betty with you' and he said 'OK mom,'” she said. “He came over to the step and she said, 'She's very unsteady on her feet, Kevin, don't let her fall.'" Morse said her rent was always paid on time, a trait she picked up from the one man she ever loved. "Before he died, when he was in the ICU, he had a tube, but he wrote, don't forget to pay the rent.” A model tenant, Morse is using Section 8 housing assistance to help cover her rent. According to the termination notice she showed to 10News, the owner is electing to opt out of the Section 8 program and not renew the lease. It states the owner will be conducting substantial renovations to the unit and following the renovations the owner desires to rent the unit at a higher rental value, being that of the market rate value. The notice states the owner will be opting out of Section 8 entirely."They clearly state on their 90-day notice that their just cause is they don't want to comply with Section 8,” said Pamela Macias with San Diego County Evictions. Macias is working with Morse and her family to try and keep her in the home. "She's willing to pay market rent and just for no reason at all they want her out,” Macias said. Morse does have children, and instead of being out on the street she could move in with one of them. However, nearing the century mark she worries about being a burden.“I don't want to be in a nursing home either,” she said. “I still want to be independent.” The 90-day-notice has expired and Morse is still living in the property. The property owner filed an unlawful detainer, which is basically an eviction lawsuit. Team 10 contacted the owners of the property; they declined to comment due to pending litigation. Housing Assistance in San Diego The San Diego Housing Commission (SDHC) states that more than 6,000 landlords are participating in the rental assistance program. Most landlords don’t usually stop participating in the program, but it does happen, according to the commission. They say the Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher Rental Assistance program includes options to meet the needs of both landlords and tenants. Landlords can increase rents for rental-assistance tenants as they would for market-rate tenants as long as 60 days’ notice is provided to the rental assistance tenants and the new rent is determined to be reasonable.According to SDHC, to evaluate the reasonableness of the rent it compares the requested rent to the rents on other units on the premises with tenants who do not receive rental assistance. Right now, landlords are not required to accept tenants who receive Section 8 rental assistance. However, in August 2019 a new amendment to San Diego’s source of income ordinance will prevent landlords from declining a tenant based only on the household receiving rental assistance. “It opens large opportunities for our clients to receive assistance and utilize their voucher in the City of San Diego,” said Carrie Leverett, director of the SDHC rental assistance department. “It allows our clients to maintain affordable housing and find affordable housing. San Diego’s Mayor and Housing A spokesperson for San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer says he and his staff have gotten to know Betty through the years because her home is near the staging area of the Ocean Beach Holiday Parade. In a statement to 10News a spokesperson for the Mayor wrote: 4994
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - A ceremony was held Wednesday to honor San Diego County law enforcement officers who were killed in the line of duty.87 names were read at noon at the memorial wall at the County Administration Building in downtown San Diego.The fallen law enforcement officers named date back to 1850, and they include San Diego police Officer Jonathan “JD” De Guzman, who was killed in the line of duty in 2016.“They did it because they loved it. They did it because they cared, and it’s just so important that those people, the survivors, know that the citizens appreciate what they did,” said Skip Murphy with the San Diego County Law Enforcement Memorial Foundation.The public joined the memorial on the northwest lawn of the County Administration Building and quietly paid respects.The San Diego Police Department is also holding a memorial ceremony Thursday morning. The department says Broadway between 14th and 15th Streets will be closed to all traffic and parking during the ceremony, which is set to begin at 11 a.m. Click through the timeline below to read more about the officers: 1135
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- A brief pursuit involving a stolen BMW ended Wednesday morning near a nursing home parking lot.The incident began shortly after 10 p.m. Tuesday when a new model BMW was reported stolen in Santee.Two hours later, San Diego police spotted the BMW traveling westbound on state Route 94 near the Euclid Avenue exit.When officers attempted to stop the car, the driver refused to pull over and sped away. With police in pursuit, the BMW made its way onto northbound Interstate 805, then transitioned to Interstate 15.The driver exited on Adams Avenue, crashed into a wall, and then got back on northbound I-15.After exiting Camino Del Rio South, police said the driver parked the stolen BMW in a nursing home parking lot in Mission Valley and ran away. Police found him a few blocks away and arrested him.The driver's name and the charges he faces were not immediately confirmed. 901