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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- The rapid rise in housing cost is beginning to cool in San Diego County, at least for now according to Zillow.Over the last year, home values rose six percent, down from more than eight percent a year ago. The Zillow report also found that home values are also rising slower than average.The trend may be welcome news for renters. Over the last year, rent rose only one percent to an average of ,540. At this time last year, rents were rising at a dizzying 3.5 percent annually.Even though price increases are slowing, the median home value in San Diego is still 4,100. 602
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- The San Diego Fire-Rescue Department gave 10News a behind the scenes look at the specially-trained team that solves arson cases. Inside Station One is the elite and highly specialized Metro Arson Strike Team, or MAST, made up of fire investigators, police detectives, ATF, FBI and a bomb squad. The team is dedicated solely to investigate arson. To be on the specialized team, MAST training goes beyond the fire academy. “You are wearing the hat of an electrical engineer, a scientist, a fire fighter, a report writer. We wear a lot of different hats and we have to be good at it,” said Captain James Shadoan. MAST spent the day with 10News demonstrating how they perform the task of solving an arson. Watch the video in the player above for more. 776
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- The South Bay continues to be devastated by the coronavirus, with several of the hardest hit ZIP codes in the region.According to San Diego County data, the hardest hit ZIP code is 92154. The area, which includes Otay Mesa and parts of Imperial Beach, has the most cases in all of the county. In the last 30 days, cases have jumped from 3,290 to 4,528. Over 1,200 of the cases in this ZIP code happened in the last month.Other ZIP codes in the region have more than doubled their case rate in recent weeks. These ZIP codes have a large Latino population; Latinos have been disproportionately impacted by the pandemic, making up a majority of the county's positive cases while only making up roughly 34% of the population.INTERACTIVE MAP: CONFIRMED COVID-19 CASES IN SD COUNTYNancy Maldonado from the Chicano Federation said it's no surprise the region continues to see the high number in cases. Maldonado explained that many of those who live in the region are essential, frontline workers and often times live in multi-generational households.The Chicano Federation has distributed over 7,000 COVID-19 safety kits to the community, including things like masks, hand sanitizer and thermometers.Maldonado said the focus of the federation has been to continue raising awareness about this virus, encouraging testing, and encouraging the community to stay home during the upcoming holidays. 1415
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — This year marks 75 years since many turning points in World War II, including the end of the war on Aug. 14. Now, the men and women who served are in their 90s and many say despite the time, they remember exactly where they were the moment they found out the war was over.“We were told you’re just going on a flight, and we were told you don’t have to, the wars over,” said 93-year-old Navy veteran Al Hansen.“The war ended and they let us all, gave us liberty for the day,” remembered 94-year-old Navy veteran Don Hubbard.RELATED: WWII veteran honors D-Day anniversary with world-wide bell ringingTo commemorate the day, the USS Midway held a ceremony. Due to coronavirus restrictions, the public was not invited, however, the event was live-streamed on the museum's Facebook page, which can be found here.In attendance were three Navy World War II veterans, including Hansen and Hubbard, along with 95-year-old Jack Scott, who said he wants to use this anniversary to remind the public to find peace.“Right now there seems to be a great deal of unrest in the country and I would like, of course, for the unrest to come to an end and for people to be kind to one another,” said Scott. 1212
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- There's a less joyful side to the holiday season: going into debt. According to a Magnify Money study of last year's holiday spending, Americans racked up an average of ,054 of debt, a 5 percent increase over last year. The study also found more shoppers put that debt on high-interest credit cards. “Doesn't surprise me at all, doesn't surprise me at all, in fact, I’m probably guilty of it too," said Jim Vogt, a San Diego State University lecturer. “It’s a hole that’s real easy to get into and hard to get out of.”Only making minimum payments on that ,050 of holiday debt will take 63 months to pay off, and could cost around 0 in interest fees.Vogt says the number one thing consumers should do before holiday shopping is have a plan and create a budget, write a list of who you'll be shopping for this season.If you are using a credit card, have a plan to pay it off on time.Vogt also warns of being mindful on Black Friday.“Black Friday a lot of it is all temptation, something looks good, but it wasn’t what we planned on," said Vogt. “Some deals aren’t as good as they seem, you have to be smart and do your research.”Smart Shopping Tips: 1192