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(KGTV) - Did Planned Parenthood call for a Disney princess to have an abortion?Yes, although it wasn't the national organization.A regional Planned Parenthood in Pennsylvania played off a popular meme and called for princesses who have had, are pro-choice, undocumented, union workers, and trans.The tweet has since been deleted. 353
(KGTV) - People who believe they were a part of San Diego’s water meter reading debacle got a chance to get some answers from City of San Diego officials Thursday night.Hundreds crowded into the Mira Mesa Senior Center for City Council-member Chris Cate’s Q&A forum on the water meter misreadings and subsequent over-billings. “It’s about trying to earn the trust back from the people,” said Cate on the meeting along with the oncoming audit of more than 250,000 water meters in San Diego.“I think people need to feel comfortable knowing that their meters actually can get read and read correctly,” added CateLast week, the City of San Diego admitted 343 customers in a pool of a little more than 2,000 had their water meters incorrectly read in the communities of Rancho Bernardo, Ranch Penasquitos, Carmel Valley and Mira Mesa.Water utility officials said it’s their plan to send out the refund checks in the next three to thirty days. 979
“Between 9 and 10 a.m. is when you’ll have the heavier outflow, so it’s still a little early,” said Jeff Bilznick, who collects samples of wastewater at the University of Arizona.8:30 a.m. and some students have yet to wake up to start their day.So outflow of wastewater at this dorm is a little low. So Jeff Bilzinck is getting a smaller bottle to scoop a little poop, so to speak. Not that you’d be able to tell by looking at it“Everyone’s disappointed when it’s not all gross,”Bilzinck said.Bilzinck and his coworker Nick are collecting wastewater from across campus, for this man, So he can test it for COVID-19.“Hi, I’m Dr. Pepper.”No, not that Dr. Pepper. Dr. Ian Pepper is a different kind of liquid genius.“I’m the director of the Water and Energy Sustainable Technology Center,” said Pepper.Dr. Pepper and his team have been testing wastewater for the coronavirus since students came back to campus and early in the school year, stopped a potential outbreak. After wastewater from a dorm came back positive, school officials tested the students living there and identified two asymptomatic students.“The trick is by identifying the asymptomatic cases early, we are, if not eliminating, we are reducing exponential spread of the virus,” said Pepper.Wastewater testing is gaining some steam in the scientific community outside of Arizona.“We as individuals, humans, shed these virus in fecal material,” said Kellog Schwab, the director of the Water Institute at Johns Hopkins University.He has been studying wastewater virology for 30 years. He says what they’re doing in Arizona is complicated.“It is not straight forward. There are a lot of interfering substances as you can imagine in a waste stream that you have to then purify the virus from. It’s not just you grab a sample from a particular part of the environment and then instantly be able to detect the virus. You need to process that sample, you need to maintain the integrity of your target of interest, and then you have to have the appropriate detection,” said Schwab.But he and Dr. Pepper agree that this type of testing could be scaled up and implemented at universities and other populated facilities where COVID-19 could potentially spread.“Wastewater epidemiology has the potential to be scalable,” said Schwab.“Perhaps targeting high-risk areas like nursing homes. We’re helping people in Yuma, Arizona, testing our farm workers when they come here in the fall, so there’s a great deal of potential,” said Pepper.“Many research laboratories have the capacity to do this,” said Schwab.That potential to expand this type of testing, and keep people safe, keeps Pepper going.“We are keeping the university open, which is really important. And, you know, dare I say, actually, probably saving lives,” said Pepper.Saving lives and closing the lid on the coronavirus. 2846
(KGTV) -- Margaret Wardlow doesn’t dwell on what happened to her one night in 1977 - a night that she became victim number 27 of the Golden State Killer. Just because she doesn’t dwell on it, doesn’t mean she doesn’t remember. Wardlow was the youngest of the serial man's victims, just 13 when she was tied up in her Sacramento home and raped.On Wednesday Joseph James DeAngelo, 72, was arrested in connection with a series of killings, rapes and burglaries that occurred around the state in the 1970s and ‘80s. Authorities from jurisdictions across California gathered in Sacramento to announce the arrest of a suspect in the decades-long East Area Rapist/Golden State Killer case.RELATED: Suspect identified, arrested in East Area Rapist/Golden State Killer caseIt's an arrest that brought back the memories of that night for Wardlow. She says at first, she had no idea her attacker was the Golden State Killer - aka the east area rapist, aka the original night stalker in her home. It wasn't until she looked up at the clock and saw it was 2:30 a.m. that she realized who he was. "'This is the east area rapist, and this is what’s going on,'" she recalls thinking. "It was time for me to realize, ‘I’m dealing with a serial rapist.'”The man also tied up her mom, stacking plates on top of her so he would know if she moved.What he didn't know about Wardlow is that before her attack, she was on top of every story that came out in the newspaper about him. Knowing that he seemed to thrive on powerless victims, when he asked in a harsh whisper, ‘Do you want to die? Do you want me to kill your mother?’" She simply said, "I don’t care.”Defiance is what she believes saved her life that night. RELATED: Timeline: Major events in Golden State killer caseDespite the terrifying ordeal, she says the crime had not defined her life."Certainly I’m a victim, I was 13 years old, a man came into my home, tied up my mother and raped me, but I don’t own that," she said. "I can choose whether I own that or not, and I don’t own it.”Wardlow says she never knew if the day would come that someone would be found and arrested. Now that it has, she’s thrilled for the other victims and their families and the diligent detectives who never gave up."I was really concerned that people would go to their graves without knowing who killed their loved ones," she said. When asked if she plans to attend the court dates of Joseph James DeAngelo, she told 10News she will, and wants to look him in the eyes and ask, "Why?" 2594
(KGTV) - Is there now an online plug-in that allows you to block people's baby pictures on Facebook?Yes.The condom company Skyn is out with a plug-in for Chrome that identifies baby photos on Facebook and then swaps them with different images.Skyn says parents share about 1,500 pictures of their children from birth to age 5 and that can be a little much.The plug-in is free in Google's Chrome web store. 413