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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - Cinema Makeup School is at San Diego Comic-Con to turn some lucky attendees into zombies with special makeup effects.The Los Angeles-based theatrical makeup school is one of many special effects companies at the convention. 10News' Brooke Sargent volunteered for a complete transformation, becoming a dreaded creature in about 90 minutes as a crowd looked on.Cinema Makeup School has been teaching some of the industry's best artists since 1993. 472
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - City of San Diego crews spent Monday preparing for the first significant rainfall since May. “With the first rains of the season in the forecast, crews are busy clearing critical drains, putting no parking signs along flood prone streets and installing backup generators for the City’s crucial storm water pump stations,” the City of San Diego posted on twitter. "During the rains, 15 crews from the City's Storm Patrol will be actively patrolling, monitoring areas in the city and responding to instances including temporary flooding and downed trees or tree branches," added city spokesman Anthony Santacroce.The heaviest rain is expected overnight Tuesday through the day Wednesday, according to 10News meterologist Megan Parry. RELATED: Megan's Forecast: Hot today followed by rain“Rainfall accumulations will average between 1 to 1.50" for the coast and valleys with some mountain areas getting closer to 2" while the deserts will pick up between .10 and .25" of rain,” Parry said. San Diego most recently had measurable rainfall on Sept. 28 but the amounts were small, Alex Tardy of the National Weather service reported. The last time “people would have had puddles in their yards” was May, Tardy said. The City of San Diego said Monday that up to 10 sandbags per person would be available at the following locations for anyone with proof of residency. Standley Recreation Center, 3585 Governor Dr., University City Robb Athletic Field, 2525 Bacon St., Ocean Beach Golden Hill Recreation Center, 2600 Golf Course Dr., Golden Hill MLK Recreation Center, 6401 Skyline Dr., Skyline Scripps Ranch Recreation Center, 11454 Blue Cypress Dr., Scripps Ranch North Clairemont Recreation Center, 4421 Bannock Ave., Clairemont Allied Gardens Recreation Center, 5155 Greenbrier Ave., Allied Gardens San Ysidro Community Activity Center, 179 Diza Rd., San Ysidro City Heights Recreation Center, 4380 Landis St., City HeightsSnow is also expected in certain parts of Southern California. #Snow? say what? it is hot right now, yes offshore flow from the Baja system continues but a cold polar storm is dropping down from the north for Tuesday and Wednesday and the 2 will merge for rain, thunder and then cold and mountain snow on Wednesday! #CAWX pic.twitter.com/bj4Bp4VE7n— NWS San Diego (@NWSSanDiego) November 18, 2019 2341

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - City Council leaders voted 5-3 to oppose President Donald Trump's executive order to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.The resolution, introduced by Concilmember Georgette Gomez, joins several other cities and states who have also stated their opposition."The border wall is a huge mistake for our region economically and environmentally. I am happy the City Council voted to pass my resolution. Our tax dollars should be spent uplifting the quality of life for all San Diegans, and tackling our issues on road infrastructure, housing, and homelessness," Gomez said following the vote. "Building a wall will do nothing for our families and communities but place a hateful divide between two of the largest cities in Mexico and the United States."RELATED: Councilmember says border wall would hurt San Diego economy, environmentThe resolution allows the San Diego City Attorney, Independent Budget Analyst, and staff to put together a disclosure program for city contractors.Councilmember David Alvarez called the border wall "a stupid idea" and a waste of money in a series of Twitter posts following the vote. 1165
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — California has rejected San Diego County's request for a tier adjustment after the region was moved into the state's purple reopening tier.The county said that "San Diego’s increased cases are not due to the sectors impacted by moving into a more restrictive tier. County has interviewed cases to identify potential exposure settings and tracked community outbreaks."County health officials say businesses that will be impacted by purple tier restrictions saw the following breakdown of COVID-19 cases in October:Restaurant/bars: 7.4% of COVID-19 cases (715 of 9,646)Retail: 6.6% of COVID-19 cases (636 of 9,646)Places of worship: 1.9% of COVID-19 cases (184 of 9,646)K-12 schools: 1.7% of COVID-19 cases (165 of 9,646)Gyms: 0.4% of COVID-19 cases (39 of 9,646)In reference to October's data, the county said that, "outbreak data also show these sectors make up a small percentage of the cases overall ... Penalizing the impacted sectors for case increases is wrong, as these sectors continue to do the right things, while trying to weather the ongoing pandemic and the back and forth of re-openings."The county pointed to many local restaurants as an example of improving its mitigation efforts and investing in materials to make their settings safe for visitors, adding, "additionally, the closure of indoor restaurants, especially during the wintertime where outdoor dining is not optimal, will move individuals into homes and encourage gatherings, which is one of the high-risk areas for cases."Despite the request, the state decided on Sunday that the county will remain in the more restrictive purple tier.COUNTY'S EXPOSURE DATA (Oct. 25 - Nov. 7)According to county public health officials, between Oct. 25 and Nov. 7, there were a reported 5,576 COVID-19 cases.Of those cases, 3,833 cases were interviewed for contact tracing and 2,260 cases reported at least one of the potential exposure settings:Restaurant/bars: 389 casesBeach: 10 casesCasinos: 20 casesGroup gatherings: 159 casesGyms: 18 casesHair salon or barber: 97 casesPlaces of worship: 118 casesProtest: 0 casesRetail: 308 casesWork: 1,314 casesOther: 158 casesThe county says 1,573 of the 3,833 cases reported no potential exposure settings.Of all the cases between Oct. 25 and Nov. 7, the county says that people reported the possible exposure settings:Household exposure: 1,311 casesTravel-related exposure: 814 casesAny education-related exposure: 172 casesThrough Nov. 7, San Diego County has reported a total of 60,169 COVID-19 cases and 908 deaths from the virus. 2566
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — California public health officials say the Southern California region has run out of ICU bed capacity.The region, which includes San Diego and 10 other counties, hit 0% capacity, as the state reported 52,200 more coronavirus cases on Thursday. California officials say regional ICU capacity is calculated based on the total number of adult ICU beds minus neonatal and pediatric ICU beds. Adult ICU capacity includes staffed ICU beds and ICU surge beds.San Diego County said Thursday that it was currently at 16% ICU capacity after adding 2,604 new virus cases. There are 295 ICU cases in the county out of 1,186 hospitalizations. County health officials said there has been a 20% increase in ICU cases locally over the last seven days.The Southern California region was one of four regions under the 15% ICU capacity threshold for California's recent stay-at-home order:Bay Area: 13.1%Greater Sacramento Region: 11.3%Northern California: 25.8%San Joaquin Valley: 0.7%Southern California: 0.0%The Southern California region includes Imperial, Inyo, Los Angeles, Mono, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, and Ventura counties. 1182
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