惠州大功率工业吸尘器-【达克斯工业吸尘器】,达克斯工业吸尘器【厂家直销】,工业吸尘器行业知名品牌!联系电话:18526080691,内江大功率工业吸尘器,德阳大功率工业吸尘器,抚顺工业吸尘器厂家,威海大型工业吸尘器,东莞大型工业吸尘器,玉溪大型工业吸尘器

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- Unintentional fentanyl overdose deaths increased by nearly 70 percent in 2019, according to the San Diego County Medical Examiner. From January through June of 2019, 69 people died from the overdoses, compared to 41 during the same time period in 2018. The number indicates a 68 percent jump, the report shows. Health officials are unsure if people are unknowingly buying counterfeit pills or powder, or if they are aware the pills are counterfeit. “In the last decade when someone overdosed on fentanyl, it was often when someone was prescribed it, and perhaps put on too many fentanyl patches or altered the patches,” said Chief Deputy Medical Examiner Dr. Steven Campman. “I can’t even remember the last time I saw a death from misused prescribed fentanyl.”RELATED STORIESMeth isn't far behind opioids in overdose deathsA drug bust in California yielded 18 pounds of fentanyl — enough for 4 million fatal dosesMysterious pills sold on the street linked to several deaths in San Diego County“Now, in the deaths we see, the fentanyl is illegally obtained as counterfeit oxycodone or alprazolam. Illegal drug makers and dealers make pills to look like oxycodone or alprazolam, but the pills have fentanyl in them, and they are deadly,” he said.Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid that is 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine and as much as 50 times stronger than heroin. “The drug isn’t designed to be put in a pill like that, and it takes very little of it to kill someone. And the illicit drug makers don’t have the kind of quality control measures that pharmaceutical companies have either,” Campman added.Until now, San Diego has been behind a national trend of increasing opioid deaths, but that’s changing, Chapman said. “This is how we are seeing the opioid epidemic here, mostly in the rise in fentanyl deaths.” 1847
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - What's better than the sights, sounds, and smells around a Cinco de Mayo celebration? Deals!A number of restaurants are celebrating May 5 with deals and discounts on drinks and eats.In addition to national deals, many local restaurants are getting into the spirit with their own drink and food specials.RELATED: Cinco de Mayo events around San Diego CountyHere's a look at some delicious Cinco de Mayo deals around town this year:National deals:Applebee’s: Dollaritas ( margaritas) are back through May 5 and Dos Equis will be available through the month of May.Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf: May 4 through May 6 (2 p.m. to close) customers can grab a Horchata Latte or Matcha Horchata Latte for just .Joe’s Crab Shack: All day May 5, Joe's is offering buckets of Modelo Especial, and tacos and Patron margaritas.On the Border: Get Cinco ’Ritas on May 5, some locations will also be throwing parties.Local deals:AleSmith Brewing: AleSmith Brewing will host a Mexican Speedway Stout release party, featuring a special cask of their brew, cupcake + beer specials, and a Mexican tin art workshop class.Barleymash: Barleymash's Cinco de Derby celebration will combining suits, sombreros, and Mint Juleps in a dual Kentucky Derby and Cinco de Mayo party. Prizes will be awarded for best dressed and best hat.Coasterra?Restaurant: Enjoy tequila tastings, a margarita contest, and food stations (including seafood paella, quesadillas, and street tacos) during Coasterra's Cinco celebration.D.Z. Akin's: Enjoy some delicious grub with specials on taco salad, chicken enchiladas, and Corona's all day.Oggi's?(In Liberty Station): Celebrate Saturday with Taco Tuesday specials and deals on Pacifico and Corona. PB Cantina: Enjoy a night across Pacific Beach in a bar crawl, featuring four bars, Cinco de Mayo-themed drink specials, and a free shot.True North: Celebrate Cinco de Mayo at True North in North Park, with shot specials, al pastor tacos, and cocktails. 2064

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - You may be owed part of the million in unclaimed money sitting in city coffers, City of San Diego officials said Tuesday. If you have done business with the city in the past three years, you may be due funds from to ,797. Some of the funds are reimbursement checks sent by the city that were undeliverable based on the address on file. Any check uncashed after 6 months becomes unclaimed. “We want to refund every single dollar of unclaimed money,” said Fanela Espiritu, Disbursements Manager with the Department of Finance. “A simple search is all it takes to verify if you were issued a check that has gone unclaimed. There is no charge to search the data or to file a claim.” There are more than 2,100 accounts, city officials said. The deadline to submit a claimed for unclaimed checks issued before Apr. 1, 2018 is Friday, June 21. You can find more information on the City of San Diego’s website. 938
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) A local conservation group came dangerously close to running into the armed kidnappers who snatched a California tourist and her guide while on safari in Uganda. Kim Endicott and her driver were abducted at gunpoint from the Queen Elizabeth National Park across the border from Congo on April 2.They were released over the weekend. Details of the negotiated release have not been made public. Bill Toone is the director and founder of Ecolife Conservation in Escondido. He and several other members were leaving the park just as Endicott's group was arriving. Their guides stopped to talk. Endicott's group left and returned to their lodge. They returned to the park roughly four hours later. That's when they were ambushed. "I'm a little surprised that it ended as positively as it did. It could have obviously been really awful, and I kind of thought it might be, so it's thrilling that she's out of there," said Toone. Among other things, Ecolife Conservation provides safe, fuel efficient stoves for homes in remote areas of the world. The group has been working in Uganda for seven years. Toone said he's never felt unsafe. He was shocked to learn of the kidnappings."First of all, it's low season there and so there are very few tourists around anyway, so I guess that is why we became a target, it made it a little simpler, or she became a target," said Toone. Toone said in the days that followed the kidnapping; his group was required to have armed guards. He says the Ugandan government has been misleading on this issue."They say it's required to have armed guards when you go in the park. We've been going to the park for seven years. Every entrance to the park is through a gate where there are wildlife officials who check your vehicle in, they know who is in the vehicles, they check the licenses of the guides, never in all the years that we've gone there has anyone even suggested that you bring an armed guard. They've been saying she should have had a guard, that is not our experience at all," said Toone. Toone hopes things return to normal soon."The repercussions could be enormous. Uganda depends very heavily on tourism dollars. That's their incentive to do the kind of conservation they do there for the wildlife," said Toone who reiterated that the kidnappings are an isolated event."We have to keep it in perspective that this was one person in a country that actually has a really wonderful record for safety. " 2465
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — We all know the rent is too high in San Diego and spending data from housing website HotPads highlights the lengths to which San Diegans are reaching into their wallets.San Diego renters spent about .2 billion on housing in the last year, that's 9 million more than in 2017, HotPad's data reports.It's enough to put San Diego third in the state, as San Francisco locals shelled out billion and Los Angeles residents paid a staggering .4 billion in 2018 for housing. See, silver lining, right?RELATED: Making It in San Diego: San Diego's housing inventory sees massive increaseWhile we try to remain positive, it's admittedly difficult when rent in San Diego saw a 4.8 percent jump from 2017, bringing the medium rent in town to ,720 a month this year. That also places San Diego third in California for that category, behind Sacramento (5.8 percent increase) and Riverside (5.7 percent increase).About 6,000 more households are being rented as well this year, bringing that number to 530,000 San Diego households.The numbers are a stark reminder of the continuing cost of housing in San Diego and throughout the state.A Trulia report published Thursday pointed out that despite inventory gains in San Diego, prices continue to rise and outpace wage growth. 1298
来源:资阳报