Significant warmup expected in San Diego ahead of 4th of July
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:46:52 GMT
SAN DIEGO -- After a cold and cloudy spring season, summer has officially arrived in San Diego and warmer temperatures are on the way. That's according to National Weather Service predictions, which show a significant warmup in the forecast starting this week and continuing into Fourth of July weekend. Though not much change is expected for Friday, temperatures are expected to be warmer this weekend and even more so into next week, according to NWS. A starry, starry night in San Diego offers a summer salutation In the short term, weather officials say a low pressure system may bring strong and gusty west winds in the mountains and deserts through Sunday.Satellite imagery from Friday showed the marine layer thinning with patchy coverage, which is allowing those on the coast to enjoy some long-awaited sunshine. The most impactful warming is expected to occur Saturday with high temperatures slightly increasing near the coast and rising around 5 degrees for inland areas, says NWS. For...Doja Cat making San Diego stop on North American tour
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:46:52 GMT
SAN DIEGO — Grammy Award winning superstar Doja Cat is coming to San Diego as part of her newly announced North American tour.The "Kiss Me More" and "Woman" singer will be performing at Viejas Arena on Nov. 5 as part of The Scarlet Tour, Doja Cat's first North American arena tour.The tour is using an advance registration system as an attempt to limit tickets getting in the hands of bots and scalpers, according to Live Nation.You can sign up for advance registration now through June 25 at 10 p.m. here. Pre-registration does not guarantee you will be able to purchase a ticket before they sell out. These 5 popular songs mention the San Diego area Fans will be randomly selected to receive a pre-sale access code to purchase tickets on Wednesday, June 28. A limited amount of general sale tickets will be available on Friday, June 30 at 10 a.m.You can find a full list of tour dates and locations here.The tour announcement comes on the heels of Doja Cat releasing her latest track "Attentio...Privacy board recommends City Council reject SDPD proposal to activate smart streetlights, license plate readers
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:46:52 GMT
Editor's note: This story has been corrected to say the Privacy Advisory Board voted to recommend City Council reject the plan.SAN DIEGO — The debate over smart surveillance street lights and license plate readers in San Diego is heating up again. The San Diego Police Department's proposal would make San Diego the largest city to use street lights with license plate readers.But the City of San Diego's Privacy Advisory Board voted unanimously Thursday night to send to City Council the Option 2 plan, which rejects SDPD's proposal, according to Seth Hall with the Trust SD coalition.Some are worried about privacy. How much income is required to afford rent in San Diego? “Put the cameras away. Who watches who?” a community member said at the meeting.Community members expressed their opposition to more surveillance technology potentially hitting the streets of San Diego.“Our biggest concern is this money should be going to our communities not towards cameras and surveillance,” said...Supreme Court ruling complicates Navajo Nation’s fight for more water
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:46:52 GMT
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — On some parts of the Navajo Nation, where roughly a third of the people lack reliable access to clean water, people have to drive for miles on red dirt roads to lug water home. Others rely on unregulated wells or water delivery trucks.Already facing some of the most severe water scarcity in the drought-stricken Southwest, the tribe now has to deal with a Supreme Court ruling this week that will make securing water even harder for the 170,000 enrolled tribal members who live on its reservation.“I know the battle and the strategy moving ahead is going to be a lot more difficult,” Navajo Nation President Buu Nygren told The Associated Press.The tribe argued that the “permanent home” promised in treaties the U.S. government signed more than 150 years ago includes a right to some of the water crossing the reservation. The question before the court was whether the federal government had to quantify the tribe’s water needs and come up with a plan to meet them.Two deca...Titan owner OceanGate will likely seek court protection, and soon: lawyer
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:46:52 GMT
ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — A maritime law professor at Louisiana’s Tulane University says the owner of a small submersible that imploded Sunday on its way to the wreck of the Titanic will likely seek court protection — and soon.Martin Davies says he expects OceanGate Expeditions will try to limit its financial liability if families of the five crew members who died aboard the Titan decide to sue.Davies said in an interview that the company would first have to decide which country’s liability laws would be most favourable.Such laws allow a vessel owner to cap the amount of money it could be ordered to pay out, but only if the owner can prove it was far enough removed from any wrongdoing.Twain Braden, a maritime lawyer in Maine, says he suspects OceanGate could have a difficult time proving it had no knowledge of the circumstances that may have caused the Titan to implode nearly four kilometres beneath the sea.He says a letter signed by subsea engineers in 2018 flagging conc...Minister’s Access to Info focus is better service amid calls for legislative overhaul
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:46:52 GMT
OTTAWA — The federal minister responsible for the much-criticized access-to-information system says her focus is on improving service amid growing calls to go further and rewrite the transparency law.In an interview today, Treasury Board President Mona Fortier says her priority is better administration of the Access to Information Act, not a legislative overhaul.Fortier’s comments follow release this week of a House of Commons committee report in which opposition MPs recommend changes to the law to curb loopholes that prevent the release of information, and the imposition of penalties when responses to requests are late. The federal access law allows people who pay $5 to request an array of government documents, but many say it is slow and ineffective. The law has not been fully revamped since its introduction 40 years ago, and users complain of lengthy delays, heavily blacked-out documents or full denials in response to their applications.Fortier says the government is emphas...Search for person feared missing after Paris explosion is complicated by debris, unstable building
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:46:52 GMT
PARIS (AP) — Paris rescuers are struggling to reach a person feared trapped in a Left Bank building that partially collapsed earlier this week in a violent explosion, the city prosecutor said Friday, citing a complex and risky rubble-clearing operation.Four people remain hospitalized in critical condition after Wednesday’s blast, and at least 54 others suffered lighter injuries or psychological shock, Prosecutor Laure Beccuau said in a statement.One person has been declared missing, but the search “has been complicated by the ongoing risk that the neighboring building could collapse, and the difficulty of clearing large blocks of stone,” she said.Buildings in the area were evacuated after the explosion, which ignited a fire that took hours to extinguish and sent smoke billowing over Paris landmarks, leaving witnesses shaken.Investigators are studying whether a gas leak could have sparked the blast, among other possible causes. Beccuau said witnesses had described the smell of ...Biden and Modi meet Apple, Google CEOs and other executives as Indian premier wraps state visit
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:46:52 GMT
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden and Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday opened the final day of the Indian prime minister’s four-day U.S. visit by meeting top American and Indian executives as the leaders look to increase cooperation on artificial intelligence, semiconductor production and space.The leaders are putting a spotlight on the “Innovation Handshake,” a new initiative aimed at addressing regulatory hurdles that stand in the way of cooperation between the two countries and promoting job growth in emerging technologies.“Our countries are taking innovation and cooperation to new levels,” Biden told the group, which included Apple CEO Tim Cook, Google CEO Sundar Pichai and Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella. “We’re going to see more technological change … in the next 10 years than we’ve seen in the last 50 years.”White House officials say India’s deep talent pool will be crucial in building more resilient supply chains and developing technology to address c...Texas businessman at center of AG Ken Paxton’s impeachment pleads not guilty to federal charges
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:46:52 GMT
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — A Texas real estate developer at the center of Attorney General Ken Paxton’s impeachment has pleaded not guilty to charges of making false statements to banks that loaned him more than $170 million.Nate Paul waived his scheduled arraignment before a U.S. district judge in Austin, according to court documents posted Friday. Paul figures heavily in 20 articles of impeachment filed against Texas’ top law enforcement officer. Paxton is accused of abusing his power and bribery in order to help Paul, who gave the Republican a $25,000 campaign donation in 2018. There is no reference to Paxton in Paul’s indictment, which accuses the developer of making false statements to multiple banks in 2017 and 2018. But one of the banks later received a subpoena, issued in person, by an attorney Paxton hired as an “outside independent prosecutor” to pursue complaints Paul made after the FBI raided the businessman’s offices.Paxton has denied wrongdoing and his impe...US sanctions Russian intelligence officers over elections interference
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:46:52 GMT
WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. on Friday imposed sanctions on two Russian intelligence officers who supervised two officers who were recently indicted by the Justice Department for their involvement in the Kremlin’s attempts to influence a local election in the United States.Yegor Popov, a Russian intelligence officer, was sanctioned Friday. He served as a primary handler of Alexander Ionov, a Russian operative who was charged by the Justice Department last year with recruiting political groups in the U.S. to advance pro-Russia propaganda, including about the invasion of Ukraine.U.S. authorities say Ionov recruited political groups in Florida, Georgia and California and directed them to spread pro-Russia talking points. Ionov, who operated an entity called the Anti-Globalization Movement of Russia, paid for group members to attend government-funded conferences in Russia, as well as a protest in the U.S. against social media efforts to suppress online support for the invasion.Popov also ...Latest news
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