µ½°Ù¶ÈÊ×Ò³
°Ù¶ÈÊ×Ò³
³±ÖÝÆ¤·ô²¡°×ñ°·çÖÎÁÆ
²¥±¨ÎÄÕÂ

Ç®½­Íí±¨

·¢²¼Ê±¼ä: 2025-05-30 05:44:43±±¾©ÇàÄ걨Éç¹Ù·½Õ˺Å
¹Ø×¢
¡¡¡¡

³±ÖÝÆ¤·ô²¡°×ñ°·çÖÎÁÆ-¡¾ÉÇÍ·Öпư×ñ°·çÒ½Ôº¡¿£¬ÉÇÍ·Öпư×ñ°·çÒ½Ôº,½ÒÑôÄĸöÒ½ÉúÖÎÁư×ñ°·ç,ÉÇβ°×ñ°·çÖÎÁÆ×¨¼Ò½éÉÜ,ÉÇβ¿´°×ñ°·çµ½ÄÄÀïºÃѽ,÷Öݰ×ñ°·ç²¡Òò¼ì²âÖÐÐÄ,°×ñ°·çÉÇÍ·ÄļÒÖεĺÃ,ÆÕÄþ301Öΰ×ñ°·çЧ¹ûºÃ

¡¡¡¡

³±ÖÝÆ¤·ô²¡°×ñ°·çÖÎÁÆÉÇÍ·°×ñ°·çÖÎÁÆÄÄÀïÓÐЧ,ÉÇβÄÄÀïÄܹ»ÖÎÁư×ñ°·ç,ÖÎÁư×ñ°·çÉÇβÄļҳöÉ«,ÉÇβ°×ñ°·çÖÎÁÆÐ§¹ûºÃÂð,½ÒÑôÄÄÀïÖÎÁÆÐ¡º¢°×ñ°·çºÃ,ÆÕÄþÒ½Öΰ×ñ°·çÄÄÀï±È½ÏºÃ,½ÒÑôר¼ÒÊÓÆµÕïÁư×ñ°·ç

¡¡¡¡³±ÖÝÆ¤·ô²¡°×ñ°·çÖÎÁÆ ¡¡¡¡

(KGTV) - The developer of the proposed Newland Sierra project is promising to prioritize 500 new homes to first responders, military, veterans and teachers. The commitment was enough to earn the controversial development the endorsement of San Diego Police Officers Association on Monday. It's the third major public safety organization to endorse the plan, which heads to voters countywide in March. CalFire Local 2881 and the San Diego County Deputy Sheriff's Association are already backing the project. "Projects like this that are building those middle-income houses, especially the ones that prioritize us, we're going to support them," said Jack Schaeffer, president of the Police Officers Association. Newland Sierra calls for 2,135 new homes in supply starved San Diego County. The County Board of Supervisors approved the project in September 2018, but a group of nearby residents and the Golden Door Spa nearby gathered enough signatures to send it to a countywide vote. RELATED: Voters could have final say over massive (and not so massive) backcountry developments"There could have been ways that things could have been worked out with Newland, but they basically wanted to build this entire new community the size of Del Mar without taking into account any of the surrounding residents," said Christopher Garrett, the attorney representing No on Newland Sierra. On Monday, Newland Sierra announced that it has made a commitment to first responders, military, veterans and teachers in writing. It recorded a covenant on its land deed that requires about 500 of its moderately priced homes to be prioritized for people in those roles. "It places a legally binding covenant on the property," said Devonna Almagro, a spokeswoman for the project. But Garrett called that an empty promise. He said it's only enforceable by the public and government if it's in the resolution that the county Board of Supervisors approved, which is heading to voters. RELATED: Developer pushes to rally support for vote on large North County housing development"There's nothing in the ballot question that says homes restricted to police officers," Garrett said. "There's nothing in the ballot language that the Board of Supervisors approved a couple weeks that says the homes have to be restricted to affordable housing, nothing like that."Newland Sierra also recorded covenants requiring 1,300 homes be priced for middle-income earners, and another 210 reserved for low-income households. Mark Dillon, an attorney representing Newland Sierra, said the covenants are, in fact, legally binding."It¡¯s a recorded document and it is now a restriction on the property," he said. "We can't just amend over it."The covenant will last for 10 years, as long as the project moves forward. 2778

¡¡¡¡³±ÖÝÆ¤·ô²¡°×ñ°·çÖÎÁÆ ¡¡¡¡

A 3-year-old was accidentally shot by her grandmother and suffered a grazing wound to both legs, police say.The grandmother reportedly found the gun in the house and was apparently trying to unload it.Police say her granddaughter will be OK. The grandmother is not in custody. 284

¡¡¡¡³±ÖÝÆ¤·ô²¡°×ñ°·çÖÎÁÆ ¡¡¡¡

(KGTV) ¡ª U.S. citizens traveling to Europe will have to be mindful of new visa rules after 2021.Starting on Jan. 21, 2021, Americans will need a ETIAS (European Travel Information and Authorization System) visa when traveling to a European Schengen-zone country, which includes Germany, France, Spain, Sweden, and Italy. Though, travelers heading to Ireland or the United Kingdom will not need the new visa.The visa will cost a one-time fee of about €7, or about to , according to a release from the European Union. The move is meant to improve security, "to avoid any further problems with illegal migration and terrorism," the ETIAS visa website says.Currently, U.S. citizens traveling to Europe for 90 days or less do not need a visa. Eventually, the new visa will be required for short-stay travel as well.To apply for a visa, Americans will need a valid passport, an email account, and a credit or debit card. Passports must be valid for three months beyond the period of an individual's intended stay.Americans will be required to have a ETIAS visa valid for three years when entering European Schengen-zone countries. The visa is a multiple-entry visa, allowing access to multiple countries. Minors must also apply for the visa.For more information on how to apply for the ETIAS visa, visit their website here. 1331

¡¡¡¡

(KGTV) - San Diego-based Rep. Scott Peters described his trip to a migrant detention center near McAllen, Texas, as "stunningly depressing.""The single men were being held in a series of rooms, each built for say 8-10 people and I think they had 40 people in them ... The faces of these men just looking out with desperate looks through these windows, some of them shirtless, it's obviously very hot in those places," the Democratic congressman said of his July 13 visit.Peters described the stench from the facility due to the inability for the men to shower. He said another holding facility the size of a convention center, had women and children in rooms divided by chain-link fence. "For the small children there's a small area where they can have toys. There's a few tragic sights you see of four or five-year-olds who are unaccompanied," he said.He said San Diego isn't dealing with nearly as many migrants compared to Texas, "the night before we arrived they picked up 2,000 people." He said he's proud of how San Diegans have stepped up, creating a migrant shelter downtown to fill in the gaps created with new laws meant to speed up the process."They do the intake, provide medical assessments, and then get these people on their way so that they can be out on their way with their family around the country and ready for their asylum hearing," he said.Ultimately he said there needs to be change at the southern border and in the countries causing their citizens to flee. 1490

¡¡¡¡

(KGTV) - The mass shooting at an El Paso, Texas, Walmart Saturday had the city scrambling to rush the victims to hospitals and lock down nearby businesses for safety.While the crime scene remained focused on the store off Interstate 10, the area affected by the emergency spread across the border town of roughly 685,000.See the interactive map: 353

¾Ù±¨/·´À¡

·¢±íÆÀÂÛ

·¢±í