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(KGTV) -- Since 2013, Kitchens for Good has helped fight hunger across San Diego by working with local food backs, created programs to help those with troubled pasts, and now they're adding a baking option to their apprenticeship program.After Kitchens for Good launched their culinary apprenticeship program five years ago, it has led to both success and opportunity. "It's an amazing program here, we are so lucky to be here doing this," said an instructor for their baking program. They added in a baking option to their existing culinary program that launched this month.Their apprenticeships aren't your normal "bake and set" classes. They hope students like Kenneth Donato, take what they learn inside to lead better lives. "Just 3 months ago I was living under a bridge, now my wife and I we're living inside. I'm going to school, I work here, and help them out," said Donato.Directors for the nonprofit said out of their 300 apprentices, 85% landed jobs upon completion. Baking instructor Helen Coyne added, "I see so many opportunities in baking and pastry, and I'm so excited for them to have that." They say adding in a baking program means more students can sign up, in hopes more will get hired.The baking program is a free 20-week hands-on course for those who qualify. 1291
(KGTV) — U.S. Navy veteran Michael White has been freed by Iran and left the country on Swiss government aircraft.White was jailed in Iran in 2018 while visiting a woman he had met online and fallen in love with, the Associated Press reported. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison after being convicted of insulting Iran's supreme leader and posting private information online.Secretary of State Mike Pompeo issued a statement, reading in part that White would be reunited with his family."He is now on his way back to the United States, where we look forward to reuniting him with his family. I commend U.S. Special Representative for Iran Brian Hook for negotiating Mr. White’s release with the Iranians. I thank the Swiss government and the work of our diplomats for facilitating this successful diplomacy," Pompeo wrote.RELATED:Mother of San Diego Navy veteran held in Iran says he lost appealNavy veteran from Imperial Beach being held in IranWife of Imperial Beach man arrested in Iran recalls suspicious behaviorThe Associated Press reported that White's release was part of a deal to free an American-Iranian physician, Matteo Taerri, from behind bars. Taerri had been charged with violating U.S. sanctions on Iran as well as banking laws. According to family spokesperson Jonathan Franks, White went to Iran to see a woman described as his girlfriend and he had booked a July 27, 2019, flight back home to San Diego on United Arab Emirates.White's mom filed a missing person report with the State Department after he didn't board the flight.White worked as a cook in the U.S. Navy and left the service about a decade ago. His mother said last year she was worried about her son's health in prison because he had been undergoing treatment for a neck tumor and has asthma.Frank said White had traveled to Iran legally with a visa.The Associated Press contributed to this report. 1895

(KGTV) - People who felt Saturday’s 7.1 earthquake in Ridgecrest posted images of the tremor on social media. The quake, which struck just after 8 p.m., was felt as far away as Mexico and Nevada. Video and images on social media showed water splashing out of pools and lights swaying. RELATED: 7.1-magnitude earthquake strikes Ridgecrest, shakes San DiegoWe’re having dinner at the highest building in the Coachella valley... #EarthquakeLA #Aftershock pic.twitter.com/VDvTQ9XmcK— mcgregor (@jeffreymcgregor) July 6, 2019From my mom @mom2five1 in Ridgecrest California @ABC7 pic.twitter.com/iZSxoJsSXU— JD (@jedent) July 6, 2019Here in Palm Springs and just felt a massive #earthquake a few minutes ago. Woah. Check out the pool moving for a minute. #earthquakeLA #palmsprings #woah pic.twitter.com/WrervE7U4t— Joey Wilson ?????? (@josephpwilson) July 6, 2019 866
(KGTV) - Did a group of pedestrians really make a bus out of cardboard to cross a vehicles-only bridge?Yes.Four people in the fake bus were caught trying to cross a bridge restricted to cars in Russia. 214
(KGTV) -- Rios Elementary School in the Cajon Valley Union School District is one of only a few districts that took advantage of the state waiver program to reopen for in-person learning this fall and is the largest in the state to qualify for one.More than 200 students attend Rios in-person, five days a week.Principal Liz Loether says despite low case numbers, they're seeing the effects of Covid, and they're trying their best to help students cope as they get back to school, but still face the challenges presented by the pandemic.Loether says those symptoms are showing up as social-emotional difficulties, reactions to frustration, levels of patience, and learning loss.At Rios they've leveraged the resource of extra space to spread out their more than two hundred kids. They have teachers rotate instead of kids to minimize contact outside cohorts.Another resource is technology. Rios was the first computer science elementary school in the country, and several years ago, the superintendent made it a priority for each of the 17-thousand students in CVUSD to have a Chromebook computer.It proved to be crucial foresight when the pandemic left many other districts scrambling to get tablets and computers into students' hands.It also meant none of the money schools got from the government was needed to buy computers."It did give Cajon Valley an advantage," says Board of Trustees Vice-President Jim Miller. Miller also says to qualify for the waiver to reopen, significant planning and coordination were required, with parents and with the teachers' union.Both Miller and the superintendent, Dr. David Miyashira, talked about trust and a sense of the community "buying-in" to the push to go back to school in person this fall.In CVUSD schools, two out of three students qualify for free or reduced-cost meals, and many of the parents are frontline or essential workers.Many Cajon Valley schools are open in a hybrid model, but there are several like Rios which are open five days. Some of the schools are providing full-day free daycare as well for frontline workers and for school staff.Roughly 20% of families have opted to do online learning full-time, but overall, the feedback they've received, he says, has been very positive.He adds that they've heard from districts across the country who have asked for advice on how to replicate their model successfully."I'm personally very proud of Cajon Valley," says Miller. 2441
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