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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - Doctor's orders: Make room for a day at San Diego's Coronado Beach.In his annual list of America's best beaches, Stephen Leatherman, a professor at Florida International University known as "Dr. Beach," named the local beach among the best in the country. Coronado Beach was also the only California beach to make the top 10 list, coming in at ninth best.RELATED: Fact or Fiction: Is Hotel Del Coronado painting its lobby white?"Coronado Beach is the toast of Southern California; it is a veritable oasis by the sea, measuring hundreds of yards wide. With its lush subtropical vegetation, unique Mediterranean climate, and fine sparkling sand, beach-goers flock to this beach for great ship-watching and the summer’s warm and mild surf," Leatherman writes on his website.Kapalua Bay Beach in Maui, Hawaii, topped the doctor's list of beaches followed by Ocracoke Lifeguarded Beach in North Carolina, Grayton Beach State Park in Florida, and Coopers Beach in New York.Beaches were measured on water and sand quality, tide and wave breaks, weather, and safety and management. Dr. Beach also gives extra points whether a beach prohibits smoking.RELATED: Hundreds of students and volunteers to clean Mission BeachSo what makes Leatherman the doctor of beaches? Since 1991, the professor has been grading the country's best beach destinations. He's regarded as a coastal expert, writing 20 books and hundreds of articles on storm impacts, coastal erosion, and beach health. 1535
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Feeding San Diego is adding additional pickup locations for San Diegans amid several closures in response to the coronavirus pandemic.Additional emergency food distribution will be set up at:South Bay: 3/17/20 | 2:00 p.m.Community through Hope465 C St., Chula Vista, Calif., 91910North Inland: 3/18/20 | 3:00 – 6:00 p.m.Community Food Connection14047 Twin Peaks Rd., Poway, Calif., 92064North Coastal: 3/19/20 | 10:30 a.m. – 6:30 p.m.Location: Brother Benno FoundationAddress: 3260 Production Ave., Oceanside, Calif., 92058East: 3/20/20 | 9:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.Salvation Army El Cajon1025 E Main St., El Cajon, Calif., 92021 Central: 3/21/20 | 10:00 a.m.Labor CouncilSDCCU Stadium, 9449 Friars Rd., San Diego, Calif., 92108Northeast Lot“This is a time of solidarity. Even as we’re asked to stand six feet apart from each other, San Diego County is coming together to meet the needs of the community,” said Vince Hall, CEO of Feeding San Diego.RELATED: Food banks deal with impact of CoronavirusFeeding San Diego said it would continue operations and implement new distribution methods, including drive-thru and drop-and-go methods for social distancing.The organization said it is monitoring additional food distributions based on community input and needs. 1283

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- From termite infestations to leaky pipes and AC units, some students at San Diego State University say their on-campus housing complex is “abysmal” even though it costs hundreds of dollars more per month than newer apartments just steps away.Shortly after moving into Aztec Corner, sophomores Hanna Bengard and Kalie Slivkoff said they had issues with electricity, a leaky A/C unit and spiders. A few weeks ago, they found termites in a roommate’s bed.They each pay ,285 a month for a four-person apartment in the on-campus housing complex, even though there’s another complex less than 20 yards away that charges 5 a month.RELATED: Thousands of students move into campus housing ahead of Fall 2019 semesterThe students say they have no other options because a new SDSU policy requires all non-local sophomores to live in on-campus housing.“It’s really frustrating,” said Bengard.Slivkoff added, “I get their point. Better GPAs, closer to campus. I get that kind of stuff, but raising the prices by nearly half, I just don’t agree with that.”SDSU took over the complex this semester with a master lease. Last year, rents were 4, according to the Daily Aztec.RELATED: Residents against SDSU 'mega-dorm' in their community“They’re forcing people to live in these apartments and that’s given them the ability to drastically upcharge the price,” said another resident, Connor Dreher.A Change.org petition demanding refunds had more than 560 signatures as of Friday afternoon.“The rent rate is a reflection of the property manager's market rate, plus SDSU’s residential education cost, which is embedded within the rent rate,” said SDSU spokeswoman La Monica Everett-Haynes. “Prior to the master lease agreement, rent was paid in 12 monthly payments. Today, SDSU’s rent on a license agreement are on a 10 installment payment agreement to accommodate student financial aid scheduling.”Everett-Haynes said the university does not own the property or directly respond to maintenance requests, but SDSU does track the requests to ensure they’re handled promptly.RELATED: SDSU Christian sorority sisters speak out over plans to demolish their house“The offices of Housing Administration and Residential Education has been actively working with residents to ensure that issues are being properly reported so that they may be addressed,” she said in a statement.As of noon Friday, there were only two outstanding service requests in the 602-bed complex, she said.Students acknowledged most service requests are handled promptly. But they said the problems just don’t seem to stop.“We’re all just fed up,” Dreher said. 2641
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - Family members are mourning the COVID-related death of an Olympic gold medalist and lifelong San Diegan.More than 4 decades ago, Arnie Robinson Jr. stood at the top of the Olympic podium."He was always so driven and so focused," said Arnie Robinson Jr.'s son, PaulPaul says his father first started feeling sick in mid-November."Labored breathing, coughing," said Paul.Robinson Jr. tested positive for coronavirus but after a week and a half, he started feeling better. A week later, on December 2, he was with a caregiver at this Skyline Hills home."Out of the blue, he struggled to take breaths," said Paul.That day, Robinson Jr. passed away at his home at the age of 72."You’re just in a state of shock and disbelief over how it happened," said Paul.It was disbelief and grief over a father and local sports legend.A high school track star at Morse High, Robinson Jr. went to San Diego Mesa College and San Diego State University, before winning a bronze medal in the long jump at the 1972 Olympics and a gold medal at the 1976 Olympics in Montreal."I think that’s one of the things that drove him. Wanting to achieve something really, really big ... setting it out there and making it happen," said Paul.That commitment was his calling card. He served in the Army and later, worked a track coach at Mesa College for three decades.In 2004, he was diagnosed with brain cancer, a grade 4 glioblastoma and given six months to live. He went through several round of chemo and radiation."After some research, a complete 180 on his diet. Looking back on it now, he saw it as another challenge," said Paul.Some 16 years later, he was in remission when he tested positive for COVID-19. Paul believes he contracted it from one of his caregivers, who also tested positive.His message to others: wear masks and take every precaution."Respect COVID for what it is. Once COVID comes and closes in, there’s nothing you can do," said Paul.Robinson Jr.'s family has started a Gofundme campaign in hopes of seeding projects related to youth sports. 2061
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - Each year around this time, we marvel as gray whales make their way from Alaska down to Baja, Mexico, to give birth. However, this year's migration started late. "This year, with the migration being so late, a lot of the moms aren't actually making it to the lagoon before they give birth. So we're seeing a lot of these pregnant females giving birth on the migration this year," said Captain Domenic Biagini, founder of Gone Whale Watching San Diego.While the migration is late, Biagini says the whales look much healthier than last year, when many died. "Likely these whales spent a little longer feeding this year to make up for what they didn't get last year, and with less sea ice than normal, they're able to actually go further north looking for food, which then also makes the migration longer," said Captain Dom. Biagini says the calves aren't strong enough to dive, so he's already seen close calls with private boaters speeding by. "The problem is a lot of these grays, especially the moms with babies, are intentionally trying to keep a low profile and people aren't realizing that they're there as they're flying through thee areas. So it's really crucial to be conscious of your speed and surroundings during gray whale season," said Biagini.He says while the newborns are more vulnerable, the moms do a good job keeping a low-profile.They should arrive at their destination in a week or two. 1433
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