南昌市哪里看神经病看得好-【南昌市第十二医院精神科】,南昌市第十二医院精神科,南昌治疗疑心症哪里的医院,南昌神经衰弱医院专业治疗是那家,南昌治疗神经官能方面哪个医院好,南昌治疗失眠上哪个科权威,南昌精神病应怎样治疗,在南昌那里治疗疑心好

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - A large group of city leaders, hotel workers, homeless service providers and community members gathered Thursday outside the Hilton San Diego Gaslamp Quarter to show support for the Yes! For a Better San Diego initative.The initiative, which will appear on the March ballot, has bipartisan support and seeks to address the city's homelessness issues, street repairs and job creation with a hotel tax increase. Supporters say the initiative would generate 7 million in the first five years. According to San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer, the highest hotel tax increase would be in downtown San Diego at 3.2 percent, with 2.25 percent for hotels on the outskirts of downtown and 1.25 percent for hotels on the outskirts of the city.San Diego's current transient occupancy tax is 10.5 percent."It's not only about the thousands of jobs that you just heard, the infrastructure and the roads, the most important issue that is facing our city the issue of homelessness and for the first time a dedicated funding stream," said Faulconer.He said the initiative would also expand the San Diego Convention Center and create 7,000 new jobs.Some tourists tell 10News raising the hotel tax could backfire and make some visitors simply stop coming to San Diego on vacation."It probably means I'll choose somewhere else next time I travel, somewhere more affordable for me," said one tourist who did not want to be identified."I definitely think it's important to deal with the homeless population and expand your economy, but I don't think that should happen with your tourism dollars. I think that's a local issue that you should fix locally."The measure would need need two-thirds the vote to pass. 1715
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- A Point Loma woman said a man took photos of her chest as she was walking into the Ralphs grocery store on Rosecrans Boulevard on Tuesday morning. It was around 9 a.m. when Julie Buerckley noticed a man standing by the entrance and as she got closer she says he began snapping photos on his phone. "He was taking pictures of me but it wasn't of my whole body, it was just of my chest," said Buerckley.Buerckley told 10News she ran inside to tell someone, but by the time employees came out the man was long gone. She said there's no telling how long he'd been there or who else he'd taken pictures of. "I'm worried about kids getting pictures taken when their parents aren't paying attention and stuff," Buerckley said. "That's what I'm worried about."She described the man as being tall, and wearing a red shirt, blue jeans and white shoes. 906

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- A local police expert thinks the recent surge in gun violence in southeastern San Diego is the work of gangs. Kevin LaChapelle is a former El Cajon police officer who investigated gang crimes, now working as an expert in gang intervention. LaChapelle thinks San Diego police will solve these crimes rather quickly.ORIGINAL STORY: Downtown San Diego: 5 people shot in shootings near Petco Park"As they gather evidence, they're going to start debriefing with each other and talking about similarities, things that the witnesses said, and really getting information that is similar to one another," said LaChapelle. He says it's too hard to pinpoint a reason for these shootings but says the suspects targeting people at random leads him to believe it's gang-related. "This leads me to believe that there's something going on within the gang itself, whether it's initiation or it could also just be the gangs flexing their muscle," said LaChapelle.RELATED: 1011
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - A new report paints a grim picture of the housing supply in San Diego.According to numbers just released by the Southern California Real Estate Research Council, housing permits in San Diego County dropped by 43% through the first six months of 2019, compared to the same period in 2018.So far this year, there have been 2,037 units of housing permitted in San Diego."We are in deep trouble in housing production," says Borre Winckel, the President of the Building Industry Association of San Diego County. "We can't build the housing for the people that need it most."Winckel says decades of increased costs from state and local fees, regulations, labor costs and more have led to this point. He says it's too expensive for developers to build anything that the average San Diegan can afford. He says that's pushing the "workforce" population of teachers, first responders and military out of the market."There will be homelessness, and there will be more workforce displacement to Temecula and points beyond," says Winckel. "That's all because we have screwed up the regulatory environment that exists to build houses for the people that need them."The numbers show a steady decline in housing construction in San Diego.2015: 6,403 permits2016: 6,0362017: 5,2302018: 4,2862019: 2.037 (so far)Winckel says the only solution is to ease regulations and make it easier for companies to build.According to the report, Santa Barbara had a 40% decline, while Los Angeles and San Bernardino had declines in permits around 20%. 1547
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- A person in a wheelchair was hit by a car while crossing the street on University Avenue Tuesday night.According to police, the crash happened on the 5800 block of University Avenue in El Cerrito.San Diego firefighters are on scene.10News will continue to update this developing story as soon as we receive more information. 358
来源:资阳报