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昆明哪妇科医院好
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发布时间: 2025-05-24 10:10:24北京青年报社官方账号
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CINCINNATI – Rachel Smith was pregnant and terrified.She started leaking amniotic fluid in January after a garbage truck hit the car she was driving. Smith was in the hospital for two weeks while doctors tried to prevent her from going into labor. Her baby girl was coming seven weeks too early, and she didn’t have a safe place for the newborn to sleep once they got home.A nonprofit organization called Healthy Homes Block by Block came to Smith’s rescue, providing a new, portable crib for baby Dé’ja when she was strong enough to leave the hospital.“We wouldn’t have had a safe sleep space for her,” Smith said. "We wasn't prepared at that point, and she just happened to come."Now little Dé’ja is happy and thriving. But Healthy Homes Block by Block is worried other babies throughout Cincinnati’s East and Lower Price Hill neighborhoods won’t be as fortunate.That’s because the U.S. tariffs on goods from China have increased the cost of the portable cribs that Healthy Homes Block by Block gives away, and the nonprofit doesn’t have any more to distribute. 1071

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CHULA VISTA, Calif. (KGTV) - A fire in a drainage tunnel had Chula Vista firefighters donning protective masks Thursday.The fire broke out about 4:30 Thursday afternoon at Eastlake Parkway and Otay Lakes Road, near the Vons and Lowe's shopping centers. It was quickly knocked down."Witnesses reported smoke billowing from a storm drain and several people running from the area," Chula Vista Fire IAFF local 2180 officials posted on twitter. "Please give our firefighters room while they work."The Chula Vista Fire Department said juveniles started the fire in the drain and left the area. No one was hurt.Officials are searching for two teens who may be involved in the incident.Firefighters are battling a tunnel fire off of Otay Lakes Road. Witnesses reported smoke billowing from a storm drain and several people running from the area. Please give our firefighters room while they work. #chulavista #publicsafety pic.twitter.com/RybXZfdqXy— Chula Vista Fire (@chulavistafire) November 1, 2019 1004

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CHULA VISTA, Calif. (KGTV) -- A Chula Vista police officer shot and killed a man who stabbed him several times in the face Tuesday night.Two officers got a call from a resident on Melrose Ave. who said a man threw a piece of concrete the size of a baseball at his head abouut 9 p.m.The officers determined the man was at a home on Monterey Ave. and went to the address at 10:25 p.m., police said.A woman opened the home's front door to the two officers.  The man began assaulting the first officer, police said, and they scuffled.Police tell 10News the man stabbed the officer up to half a dozen times in the head and face. The officer fired several times in self-defense, police said.At least one shot hit the man, who died on his way to the hospital.  CVPD identified him as 27-year-old David Scott.The second officer and the department chaplain, who was on a ridealong, were able to assist the injured officer. He was taken to UCSD Medical Center in Hillcrest. He did not require surgery and is expected to recover.City News Service contributed to this report. 1101

  

CHULA VISTA (KGTV) -- After years of a growing demand for cafeteria lunches at South Bay middle and high schools, frustrated parents say the lunchrooms have become overcrowded.Some parents say the problem was predictable. The proliferation of housing developments and road congestion surrounding eastern Chula Vista schools were strong signals that campuses would be impacted. Others say the district’s multi-million dollar budget shortfall is to blame.However, while parents and students struggle to navigate the crowds during lunch, district officials say the current situation is routine early in the school year.“As students become more comfortable or reacquainted with the campus, class schedules, and learn to prioritize lunch, the flow of the meal service will improve,” says Manny Rubio, Sweetwater Union High School District spokesperson.That’s not so, say families at Otay Ranch High, Eastlake middle and high schools, and Rancho Del Rey. The problem has gotten worse over the years, according to these families. "Yes my kids never get to eat at Eastlake High they always come home with headaches not enough time to eat and by the time they make it thru the line theres no choices of food,” one parent told 10News on Facebook.Some hope to land a fourth-period class near the cafeteria to get to the lunch line quicker."My son mentioned that to mom yesterday. I was a bit skeptical so I downloaded the daily schedule for ELM [Eastlake Middle School]. How the ---- do they expect kids to get from their class, wait in line for food, and eat in 30 minutes?"Another parent said the overcrowding had left her students with few to no meal choices.“If your child shows up a few minutes late they're not going to get any food. My high schooler and middle schooler always brought their own food because of this,” said another parent.Rubio says that he hears the public's concerns but insists the current situation inside the lunchrooms and at various points of sale is only temporary. “At all of our schools we aim for about a 1.5-2 minute wait time. At most of our schools we see lines cleared within 10-15 mins – meaning that after that time there are no lines and wait time is less than 1 minute,” Rubio says.Given those figures -- plus factoring in the time it takes to walk to and from the cafeteria -- a student would have roughly have 5-10 minutes to eat, in a worst-case scenario. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that students get at least 20 minutes for adequate time to eat.“My high school graduate never had enough time to get a school meal. We had to send him food for him to eat because of the lines and wait times,” said one parent.Waiting it out is a risky strategy, according to some parents and students.“At Rancho del Rey Middle they run out of food while kids are still in line. We've been bringing lunch for a few years now, for my peace of mind,” said one mom.DISTRICT: FINANCIAL SCANDAL A NON-FACTORSome parents have speculated that the district's inability to properly tackle the problem is due to a financial scandal that came to light last year. They argue the district has reduced the issue of crowded lunchrooms to a low priority.Currently, SUHSD is working to climb out of a million debt and is facing a state audit for possible fraud.“There aren’t enough resources at the schools for the number of students they have going there! This needs to be corrected!,” one parent said.Rubio says the district’s financial shortfall has nothing to do with the perceived lunchtime problem, and that schools have the resources to ensure they are meeting student needs.SUHSD has routinely overspent its tax-supported Government funding to operate its food services, according to Ed-Data records. The district has spent nearly million more than it was granted between 2011-2018.By comparison, San Diego Unified School District, the county’s largest school district, received a total of 7.8M in funding and spent 3.1M.SUHSD’s most significant expenditure was recorded during the 2017-2018 fiscal year when the district spent .2M of the .9M it was granted for its Cafeteria Special Revenue Fund, according to Ed-Data.Rubio says the district is equally vulnerable to the rising costs in the food service industry, which includes an increase in vendor, menu item, and transportation costs. “We are constantly trying to negotiate lower prices for items, but overall we, like most others, have seen costs go up,” Rubio says.Data on three other San Diego County school districts -- La Mesa-Spring Valley, Fallbrook Union High, San Diego Unified -- show they either underspent or stayed within ,000 of their cafeteria funding between 2013-18. 4693

  

CHULA VISTA, Calif. (KGTV) -- Hundreds of thousands of veterans and active duty military call San Diego County home, but a group says they are facing big disadvantages when trying to buy a house here.The San Diego Veterans Association of Real Estate Professionals says more than 60 percent of listings in the county won't accept offers with V.A. loans.The federally backed loans don't require a down payment or mortgage insurance. Those eligible in San Diego County can borrow up to about 0,000 without any cash down. "We have served, and the V.A. loan is a guaranteed loan," said Andre Hobbs, a San Diego realtor and veteran who heads the association.Hobbs says the benefit is backfiring for some home seekers in San Diego's ultra-competitive housing market. It's because he says sellers are opting for offers instead that include cash down payment because of a misperception about V.A. applicants."They assume that this buyer is ready to walk," Hobbs said. "He's not motivated."Mark Goldman, a real-estate lecturer at San Diego State University, said there are some misconceptions about V.A. loans, such as that they are more complex. He added there are a few extra disclosures, but they aren't cumbersome. But V.A. buyers can also have an advantage if the current owner also served in the military."Luckily we may meet another veteran seller that understands, 'hey, I'm willing to do that,'" Hobbs said.    1460

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