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Yard House Opens in Mission Valley

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Yard House – a restaurant and bar known for its extensive selection of draft beer – has opened a brand-new, 11,000-square-foot location in Mission Valley, complete with 130 taps.

The company announced Thursday that its second location – this time at Westfield Mission Valley Mall – is now officially open for business. Like its sister location in downtown San Diego, this site offers a vast array of beer on tap, including 40 regional craft options – 20 specifically from local brewers.

The company says San Diego-based brewers claiming a slot on the draft list include: AleSmith Brewing Company; Alpine Beer Company; Ballast Point Brewing Company; Belching Beaver Brewery; Coronado Brewing Company; Green Flash Brewing Company; Groundswell Brewing Company; Modern Times Beer and Pizza Port Brewing Company, among several others.

The new location will also offer the “Chalkboard Series,” a selection of limited released from craft brewers that rotates monthly.

The eatery is open daily for lunch, dinner and late-night dining. Happy Hour goes down Monday through Friday from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m., and Sunday through Thursday from 10 p.m. until closing time, with select appetizers from $5, as well as select beer, wine and cocktails.

The new Mission Valley spot features seating for 310 patrons, plus three-dozen more seats around the bar. Décor includes an original collection of art by California artist Jerome Gastaldi, the company says.

Like Yard House locations before this one, classic rock music is central to the vibe, with jams from the 1980s and 1990s filling a 5,000-song playlist that is distinct to the location.

The first Yard House opened in Long Beach, Calif., in 1996 with a noteworthy 250-tap draft beer system. Nearly 20 years later, the company operates 60 restaurants across the U.S., each with its own endless fleet of tap handles.
 



Photo Credit: Yard House/Facebook

Charges To Be Dropped for 2 Soccer Players in Flight Ruckus

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Charges will be dismissed for at least two of the San Diego-based soccer players accused of disturbing a Southwest Airlines flight last month, leading the flight crew to divert the plane off course.

Attorney Christy Drake told NBC 7 Thursday that two of the six defendants – Saiman Hermez, 19, and Ghazwan Asaad Shaba, 21 – will no longer face charges. She represents Hermez in the case.

The dismissal of charges for the other four men – Jonathan Khalid Petra, 20; Essa Solaqa, 20; Khalid Yohana, 19; and Wisam Imad Shaker, 23 – are still pending, Drake confirmed.

A complaint filed against the young men in early September accused them of behaving in a rowdy and unruly manner aboard an Aug. 31 Southwest Airlines flight from San Diego bound for Chicago.

According to the complaint, the men – who reside in the Chaldean community of El Cajon in east San Diego – were allegedly shouting, standing, refusing to obey orders from flight crew members, using profanity and calling people names on Flight 1522.

At one point, a flight attendant allegedly feared for the safety of crew and passengers. The flight crew declared the group a "Level One Threat" and ultimately decided to divert the plane to Amarillo, Texas, rather than continuing on course to Chicago.

Upon deplaning, the men were detained and charged with interfering with a flight crew, aiding and abetting – counts that carried a maximum of 20 years behind bars for each of the accused.

The men were later released from custody and returned home to El Cajon on Sept. 4, traveling by car.

Family members and leaders in San Diego’s Chaldean community were shocked by the allegations against the soccer players and said the men were not being rowdy, rather only using their Aramaic language on the flight. They said kicking the men off the plane was an overreaction by the flight crew.

Upon their return home, a spokesperson for the men said the group planned to eventually file a joint lawsuit against Southwest Airlines.

Drake told NBC 7 she is only representing Hermez in the criminal case, not in the civil lawsuit so at this point, it is unknown if Hermez or the other men still plan to move forward with filing the lawsuit.

San Diego businessman and activist for the Chaldean community Mark Arabo released this comment Thursday on the latest developments concerning the case of the Southwest Six:

 

"Today, the federal government made the right decision, and took a proactive step against intolerance. We commend the federal government for acknowledging the issue as nothing more than what it is -- a few young men acting immature."

"Justice has been served for 2 of the individuals on Southwest flight 1522. We need to ensure that never again will Southwest Airlines terrorize young people for simply speaking another language. We fully expect, and and will continue to support the rest of the young men throughout the remainder of their cases. And, we will stop at no lengths to protect any and all flyers from having to go through with the orchestrated pandemonium that Southwest Airlines put their passengers through. Our work will not stop."
 



Photo Credit: Amarillo Globe-News

Woman Attacked on Oceanside Pier

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Oceanside Police are looking for a suspect who assaulted a 67-year-old woman at the Oceanside Pier Tuesday.

The suspect attacked the woman on the Strand at the base of the Pier around 7 pm knocking her unconscious all while pedestrians, surfers, and beach goers were around. 

The suspect, who is wanted for felony assault, is described as a dark-skinned man between the ages of 20 and 30 with long dread locks. At the time of the assault he wore a black sweatshirt and blue floral board shorts. He may have had a skateboard.

She was transported to a local trauma center with serious injuries. It appeared the suspect did not know the victim.

Police are asking any witnesses to call Oceanside Police Crimes of Violence Detective M. LaVake at (760) 435- 4872.



Photo Credit: nbcsandiego/Instagram

Coronado Halts Bike Lanes for Ruining Aesthetics

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Concern over bike lane striping ruining the town’s aesthetics has led Coronado officials to table the plan.

While the Coronado City Council previously approved striping streets to designate bike lanes, residents at a public meeting last week complained about the lane striping, so officials put a hold on the plan.

Coronado’s city manager will put the plan on a meeting agenda at a later date, so they can decide how to best move forward.

While there are a few places with bike lanes in Coronado, the proposal would have expanded where they are. Some residents have called the bicycle lane striping “ugly looking.”

“When I drove past, it brings to mind a visual cacophony that if you look there long enough it will induce a dizzying type of vertigo,” said resident Carolyn Rogerson.

“You are covering Coronado with paint stripe pollution,” echoed resident Gerry Lounsbury.

Not everyone, however, was against the plan. A couple residents implored city councilors to move forward with the plan, saying it was necessary for public safety.

Andy Henshaw, executive director of the San Diego Bicycle Coalition, said adding bike lanes in Coronado is especially important for bike safety and beneficial overall for the often-congested island.

“The aesthetics of the bike lanes shouldn’t matter,” he said. “This is about increasing bike safety in Coronado, which is a great place to ride.”

Henshaw said the coalition is preparing a letter to the council with a formal request to revisit the striping plan.

New Badges to Be Issued at San Diego Airport

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New security badges are being issued at airports across the nation, including Lindbergh Field, after an NBC investigation found hundreds of badges reported missing.

The IDs, called Secure Identification Display Area (SIDA) badges and Sterile Area active badges, allow thousands of San Diego airport employees access to the most secure areas.

Right now, Lindberg Field has more than 7,000 security badges held by active employees, tenants and contractors. The Transportation Security Administration told NBC 7 back in July it planned to crack down on ID badge compliance.

This was after the NBC Dallas Fort Worth Investigates Team found thousands of security badges at airports across the nation were missing.

Here in San Diego, 276 ID badges from Lindbergh Field employees or contractors were reported missing during a recent two-year period.

NBC 7 Investigates found more than 20 of those ID badges were missing for six days or more before they were reported. In one case, eight months went by.

Glen Winn, an aviation security expert with 36 years of airline and airport security experience, said the re-badging process will make Lindberg Field safer.

“There’s a safety reason and a security reason for that. Because who got those other badges? And what access do they have?” Winn said.

The Airport Authority typically conducts criminal history record checks for the past 10 years for new hires. Now, during a re-badging process, they'll also do an additional two-year criminal background check.

“So, you may have some people working for you that you don’t want working for you anymore,” Winn said. “Because they may have had some type of criminal act that their supervisor wasn’t aware of and they’re out on bond and you don’t want that.”

The Airport Authority declined an on-camera interview saying information regarding specific plans and procedures on the re-issuance of badges is a security measure they would rather not discuss publicly.

NBC 7 Investigates asked, but did not receive figures on how much the process will take or how long it will take to complete.
Winn said it will be “very, very expensive.”



Photo Credit: NBC 5 News

Haggen Plans to Close Calif. Stores, Including 19 in SD

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After an ambitious business expansion gone wrong, Haggen Inc. announced Thursday it wants to close all of its California stores, including 19 locations in San Diego County.

The announcement follows news earlier this month that the Pacific Northwest grocery store chain filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection amid dismal sales.

In court papers, Haggen outlined a plan to close 100 stores, asking a bankruptcy judge's permission to do so. 

A list of all the stores closing shows that 19 San Diego County stores will be impacted:

  • Carlsbad: 7660 El Camino Real
  • Chula Vista: 360 East H St.
  • El Cajon: 1608 Broadway St.
  • El Cajon: 13439 Camino Canada
  • San Diego: 2235 University Ave.
  • San Diego: Turqoise Street.
  • Carlsbad: 955 Carlsbad Village Dr.
  • Del Mar: 2707 Via De La Valle
  • La Mesa: 3681 Avocado Ave.
  • Poway: 14837 Pomerado Road
  • Rancho Bernardo: 12475 Rancho Bernardo Road
  • San Diego: 7895 Highland Village Place
  • San Diego: 10740 Westview Parkway
  • San Diego: 5950 Balboa Ave.
  • Santee: 9870 Magnolia Ave.
  • Coronado: 150 B Ave.
  • San Diego: 422 W. Washington St.
  • San Diego: 10633 Tierra Santa Blvd.
  • San Diego: 14340 Penasquitos Drive.

Earlier this year, Haggen bought 146 Albertsons and Safeway stores, expanding from 18 stores in Oregon and Washington into new markets in California, Nevada and Arizona.

The stores soon struggled, and Haggen then sued Albertsons for more than $1 billion in damages, alleging the supermarket giant engaged in systematic efforts to eliminate it as a viable competitor in five states.

Many local customers have complained that prices were too high. Haggen officials admitted there was a pricing problem when it first took over the stores, but shoppers were seemingly tough to convince it was a temporary glitch.

A price check by Consumer Bob last week showed Vons groceries were actually priced higher than Haggen groceries -- unless you had a Vons club card, which made Vons groceries cost less in that case.

It was not immediately clear what would happen to the locations once Haggen shutters.

A Haggen news release stated that employees at the stores closing would receive a 60-day notice and that the locations would remain open during the notice. 



Photo Credit: Consumer Bob

Panda Cub at National Zoo Is Named

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Surprise! The National Zoo's giant panda cub has a name!

The month-old cub's name — Bei Bei — was unexpectedly revealed Friday during an event at the zoo. First Lady Michelle Obama revealed the cub's name herself.

The name means "precious, treasure," according to the National Zoo in Washington, D.C.

The zoo had said it would make an announcement about its pandas Friday. However, in the past, the zoo has named its panda cubs at 100 days of age in a nod to Chinese tradition. This cub is significantly younger, so the revelation of its name came as a surprise.

China's First Lady Madame Peng Liyuan was also at the National Zoo for the announcement. Peng said she and Michelle Obama decided on Bei Bei together.

Keepers at the China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda had suggested the name, while keepers at the National Zoo submitted Ping Ping, which means "peaceful and calm." 

"I expect and am confident that the giant pandas will continue to serve as an important link between our peoples...." Peng said through a translator.

Before the big reveal, students from Washington Yu Ying Public Charter School in D.C. performed songs for the first ladies. Peng and Obama then unfurled a set of scrolls revealing the cub's name.

Bei Bei and his twin brother were born to the zoo's female giant panda, Mei Xiang, Aug. 22. The smaller of the twins died four days later, but Bei Bei has grown and thrived. At four and a half weeks old on Monday, he weighed nearly three pounds -- more than either of his older siblings at a similar age.

The zoo anticipates that the public will be able to see Bei Bei in person in early 2016.

Mei Xiang and the zoo's male giant panda, Tian Tian, have two older surviving cubs: 2-year-old Bao Bao, who also lives at the zoo, and 10-year-old Tai Shan, who now lives at a breeding center in China.

Tian Tian and and Bao Bao were in their outdoor yards when the announcement was made. They got to celebrate with "panda-friendly frozen cakes," the zoo said.

Bao Bao's name was one of several options presented to the general public, which then voted online for the final choice. Her name -- which, just like her little brother's, means "precious" or treasure" -- was revealed when she turned 100 days old, during a ceremony at the zoo held Dec. 1, 2013.

Tai Shan's name was also revealed when he was 100 days old. His name means "peaceful mountain."



Photo Credit: Smithsonian's National Zoo
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Pope Places Rose at 9/11 Memorial: 'Here, Grief Is Palpable'

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After receiving a joyous welcome to New York City, Pope Francis arrived at the Sept. 11 Memorial and Museum in lower Manhattan Friday and led a multi-religious prayer for peace, his second stop on a day chock-full of events featuring a procession in Central Park and Mass at Madison Square Garden.

"I feel many different emotions standing here at Ground Zero, where thousands of lives were taken in a senseless act of destruction," the pope told 400 representatives from faith groups and nearly two dozen relatives of 9/11 victims. "Here, grief is palpable. This is a place where we cry."

Standing near the underground flood wall that separates lower Manhattan from the Hudson River and held fast during the 2001 terrorist attacks, His Holiness spoke about meeting some of the families of 9/11 first responders, saying he once again saw how acts of destruction are not impersonal.

They "always have a face," Francis said. 

Family members showed the other side of their pain, though, he said. They showed the "power of love and remembrance," a memory "that does not leave us empty."

Read Pope Francis' full address at the 9/11 Memorial.

Earlier, Francis solemnly approached the reflecting pools that mark the footprints of the World Trade Center's twin towers before they were felled by the 2001 attacks, bowing his head and clasping his hands in prayer as he blinked at the bronze panels that bear the names of the nearly 3,000 people killed. After a pause, he lifted his head for another moment of silence as cameras snapped behind him, then placed a white rose at the edge of one of the pools.

The pope met with at least 10 families of Sept. 11 victims and emergency responders, gracefully lingering to speak with more relatives who crowded around him on the hallowed plaza. 

Bob Lembo, a firefighter who responded to the World Trade Center the day the towers came down, said the pope's visit brought some closure.

""For him to respect this place, to come down here, all the brothers and sisters we lost, it means a lot," Lembo said.

Twelve-year-old Patricia O'Keefe, who is in a wheelchair, waited near the memorial early Friday with her mother, who worked with the Red Cross and opened the first respite center on 9/11. The Fairfield, Connecticut, girl said it was a "dream come true" to be at the event with a chance to see the pope. 

Former Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Mayor de Blasio and First Lady Chirlane McCray were among the dignitaries who greeted the pontiff at the somber site before the entourage headed into the museum to hold prayers for peace in five different religions with an imam and a rabbi.

There, he called for building unity, saying there should be opposition to "any attempt to make us all the same." Pope Francis encouraged all to "say yes to our differences, accepting reconciliation."

The pontiff said the world must look to its diversity of languages, cultures and religions and throw away "feelings of hate and revenge and rancor." 

After the multi-religious prayer ceremony, Francis had a private viewing of the "Last Column," the final steel beam removed during the recovery after the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. He also saw a Bible that was recovered at the site.

Francis is the first pontiff to visit the Sept. 11 memorial. His predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI, prayed at the World Trade Center site in 2008 before the memorial opened.

Monsignor John Delendick, the FDNY chaplain and pastor of St. Jude’s Church in Canarsie, was in the World Trade Center at the time of the attacks. He compared Francis’ public prayer to his predecessor’s private prayer at the site by saying the current pontiff was taking it to a “logical next step.”

“He says, ‘Well, I’m going to go there and pray, but I want all of you to pray with me,’” Delendick said. “And not just Catholics, or Christians, but people of all faiths. You know, we need to pray together if we want peace in this world. We’ve got to unify and do it together.”

The service was just one of the pope’s stops during a busy Friday around Manhattan.

It followed the first papal address to the United Nations' General Assembly in which Pope Francis declared there is a "right of the environment" and that mankind has no authority to abuse it, telling more than 100 world leaders and diplomats that urgent action is needed to halt the destruction of God's creation.

In the afternoon, the pope Francis made a trip to Our Lady Queen of Angels School in East Harlem.

Then, tens of thousands of New Yorkers and spectators across the country crowded Central Park to see Francis, who led a procession through the iconic grounds before celebrating Mass at Madison Square Garden.

He will depart for Philadelphia Saturday morning.



Photo Credit: AP

WATCH: Children's Chorus Sings at Ground Zero

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A children's chorus sang after Pope Francis' remarks at the 9/11 Museum at Ground Zero in New York City on Sept. 25, 2015. "Let there be peace on earth," the choir sang, "and let it begin with me."

Arsonist Lights Family’s Car on Fire

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Police are searching for a suspect who lit a family’s car on fire overnight in a bizarre act of arson and vandalism in National City.

A father and his daughter were sitting on the front porch of their home in the 300 block of East 2nd Street just before 2 a.m. when a man ran up to their car, which was parked in their driveway. Suddenly, the man threw a brick through the back window, shattering the glass, and then threw a plastic bottle through the busted window.

The bottle contained an unknown substance, police said, which sparked a fire inside the vehicle.

The man then ran away, leaving the family’s car ablaze.

The daughter called 911 while the father grabbed a hose and put out the fire before police and firefighters arrived. His quick thinking prevented the flames from spreading to his home, officials said.

The victims didn’t get a good look at the arson suspect. Police said the man was described as 5-foot-9 with a husky build, wearing a beanie cap. The man fled on foot toward National City Boulevard after the odd incident.

No one was injured. The family’s car mostly sustained damage to the window and trunk. The daughter said they purchased the vehicle just one year ago.
 



Photo Credit: NBC 7 San Diego

Students Killed in Seattle Duck Tour Crash Identified

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Three out of the four international students killed when a Ride a Duck tour bus collided with a charter bus have been identified, North Seattle College said.

Claudia Derschmidt, a 49-year-old Austrian; Privaudo Putradauto, 18, from Indonesia; Mami Sato, 37, from Japan; and a 17-year-old Chinese student were killed in the accident on the Aurora Bridge in Seattle, Washington.

The four were among 45 students and staff members were aboard the bus headed to orientation.



Photo Credit: AP

Boo! Halloween Spending Declines in 2015

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October is almost upon us, which means Halloween is on our minds — or at least on the minds of retailers. 

Over 157 million Americans will take part in Halloween this year and total spending is expected to reach $6.9 billion, down from $7.4 billion last year, according to an annual survey by the National Retail Federation (NRF). Those celebrating plan on spending an average of $74.34, also down from last year's average of $77.52.

"Halloween has been on the upswing in terms of the number of people celebrating and what they're spending, so we've reached a point where people have been stocking up for several years now," NRF spokeswoman Kathy Grannis Allen said. "The average person is content with the amount of merchandise they already have." 

Democrat, Ky. Clerk Kim Davis, Becomes Republican

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The Kentucky clerk who refused to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples is switching to the Republican party after she feels Democrats abandoned her in her fight.

"I've always been a Democrat, but the party left me," Davis said, according to her legal representatives.

Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, a Baptist preacher running for president, visited Davis in jail and held a rally for her efforts. Texas Sen. Ted Cruz also traveled to Kentucky to bask in her defiance. Davis was freed from jail on the condition she does not interfere with her deputies issuing marriage licenses.

Davis was elected Rowan County clerk last fall as a Democrat, replacing her mother, who served as county clerk for 37 years. 



Photo Credit: AP

Police Charge Man With Murder in Encanto

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San Diego Police charged a man in the shooting death of another man in Encanto earlier this month.

Fredrick Justin Weekly, 35, was already in custody on another matter when he was charged for the murder of Kirk David Sampson Thursday.

Police found Sampson unconscious with several gunshot wounds to his chest at a home in the 1100 block of Evelyn Street. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

Weekly is scheduled to be arraigned in San Diego Superior Court on September 28.

Police ask anyone with information about the incident to call the San Diego Police Department’s Homicide Unit or Crime Stoppers at 888-580-8477.



Photo Credit: necn

Pope Francis to Put Immigrants Center Stage at Independence Hall

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When Pope Francis gives an address on immigration and religious freedom at Independence Hall in Philadelphia on Saturday, he will speak as a religious leader for whom the treatment of immigrants is so central to his papacy that his first official trip was to a Mediterranean island where hundreds have died trying to reach Europe.

Francis will meet with immigrants before his speech at the place where both the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution were signed, and bless a 5-foot-tall cross symbolizing the journey of faith of Latino Catholics.

“It will be the perfect venue for him to harken back to our roots as a nation, and remind us of our heritage and the principals on which our nation was built,” said Kevin Appleby, director of migration policy for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

The South American son of immigrants himself, Francis is making immigrants one of the focuses of his first visit to the United States. At a time when a top Republican presidential contender, Donald Trump, advocates for a wall along the Mexican border to keep out what he labels rapists and other criminals, Francis urges respecting the reasons that children, women and men leave their homes.

Speaking to the U.S. Congress on Thursday, Francis urged its members to be humane and just as they responded to the migrants pouring into Europe and the immigrants, often undocumented, coming to the United States from Latin America.

"We must not be taken aback by their numbers, but rather view them as persons, seeing their faces and listening to their stories, trying to respond as best as we can to their situation," Francis said.

Francis’ worldview is from the bottom up, with immigrants at the core of what he cares about, said John Carr, director of Initiative on Catholic Social Thought and Public Life at Georgetown University.

When Francis visited Lampedusa in 2013, the tiny Sicilian island toward which tens of thousands leaving North Africa have fled, he said the drownings of migrants was "a thorn in the heart." Two years later, with masses of Syrians refugees arriving in Europe, he is calling on every Catholic parish, monastery and convent to take in a family.

“For Pope Francis this is personal not political. This is moral not ideological,” Carr said.

Francis’ visit is replete with reminders of his appeal for better treatment for immigrants, including meetings with day laborers and children who crossed the border unaccompanied by adults. Francis had talked about arriving in the United States via a border crossing, though in the end he flew into Joint Base Andrews.

“To enter the United States from the border with Mexico would be a beautiful gesture of brotherhood and support for immigrants,” Francis said.

Immigrants from Los Angeles, among them young children, headed to Washington, D.C., and Philadelphia to appeal to Francis for help. Five-year-old Sofie Cruz, whose parents are from Oaxaca, Mexico, told NBC Los Angeles that if given the opportunity to meet the pope, she would ask Francis to talk to the president and Congress about legalizing her parents and others.

She did manage to meet the pope — delivering a shirt and letter to him during a parade in the nation's capital.

Raesha Cartagena, the mother of a Catholic school student in New York City, said she thought Francis was trying to ensure that all people are treated with respect regardless of whether they are citizens.

“What he’s trying to teach is tolerance," she said. "I think he’s trying to focus on teaching people how to create compassion and understanding for people who are new here."

Observers not expect him to come with particular legislative challenges to American politicians. But even when he is not specific about policies such as immigration reform, his position and that of the Roman Catholic Church is clear, Appleby said.

“I think his purpose is not necessarily to get into the domestic policy debate or political season but to move hearts, to change hearts,” he said. “So he’s going to do everything in his power to raise up the common humanity that we have with migrants.”

Francis’ views on immigration and some other topics are out of step with many in power in the United States. A Gallup poll found that his favorability rating had dropped from 76 percent in February of last year to 59 percent in July, a decline driven by Catholics and conservatives.

In the last Congress, the Senate passed a bipartisan immigration bill that would have offered citizenship for many of the United States' 11 million unauthorized immigrants, but the bill died in the House.

By contrast, this Congress has opposed President Barack Obama’s executive orders to stop the deportation of some undocumented immigrants.

William D'Antonio, a senior fellow at Catholic University in Washington, D.C., said the Catholic church has gone from one that was almost entirely of white, European heritage to one that is almost half Hispanic. Of the 51 million Catholics in the United States, 40 percent are Latino.

"We are simply doing something that continues the American pattern of being an immigrant society," he said.

Latinos will look to him as their champion, said Carr, with Georgetown University. He said that he hoped that people opposed to immigration reform would listen to the pope, step back from the politics and think about the problem in moral terms.

"It is a wonderful thing that on his first visit to the United States, he will stand in Independence Hall and see where our nation began," he said. "It will remind him and it will remind the rest of us I hope what makes us who we are."
 



Photo Credit: NBC10

ESPN Reportedly Re-Evaluating 'SportsCenter'

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ESPN's signature 'SportsCenter' news program is reportedly undergoing changes to keep up with the 24 hour pace of online news.

According to The Big Lead, ESPN will cut the show's airtime in half and drop its afternoon live show.

The company is expected to lay off up to 300 people over the next few months, according to The Big Lead's sources. The changes are attributed to parent company Disney requesting ESPN to cut its budget by $100 million in 2016 and $250 million in 2017.

The network issued a statement on the matter to CNBC, saying: "ESPN has historically embraced evolving technology to smartly navigate our business. Any organizational changes will be announced directly to our employees if and when appropriate."



Photo Credit: Getty Images

San Diego Rep. Peters Reacts to Boehner's Resignation

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A San Diego representative said he hopes the next leader of the Republican caucus in the House of Representatives will do a better job of uniting both parties in Congress. 

“We call it the Speaker of the House, not the Speaker of the Republicans,” San Diego Rep. Scott Peters said when reacting to John Boehner’s resignation as Speaker of the House Friday. “I would just ask the next leader to be the leader of the whole Congress, not just the Republican Party.”

Speaker Boehner announced his resignation at a news conference Friday morning, saying continued turmoil over his leadership would do irreparable harm to the House. Boehner was a focus of conservative’s complaints during his time as speaker, and prior to announcing his resignation, faced the threat of a floor vote over whether he would remain in his spot.

Peters, in his second term as representative of the 52nd District, said he felt frustrated with Boehner's leadership of the Republican majority.

“There are a lot of things… that moderate Democrats and moderate Republicans can agree on, but he never really gave us a chance to work on it,” Peters told NBC7. “I’m not sure what the inner working of that caucus was, but I’m sure he was as frustrated in many ways as a lot of us were.”

Peters praised particularly;s commitment to public service, but said he felt the Speaker’s inability to reach across the aisle has harmed San Diego as well, particularily when it comes to budget issues. 

“Budgeting issues are particularly difficult on San Diego where we rely heavily on military investment. That all gets stalled by sequester and shutdowns. People don’t know what to plan on. They don’t know if they can hire people,” he said.

“We have a big science community, a lot of people doing research in those labs depend on NIH grants to fund their research and each of those labs is really a small business and we don’t want those people to be laid off. I mean, it really is unfair for us to do that,” Peters said. 



Photo Credit: NBC 7

Volkswagen Appoints New CEO After Emissions Scandal

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Volkswagen's board has named Matthias Mueller, the head of the group's Porsche unit, to be the new CEO and to lead the world's top-selling automaker past a growing emissions-rigging scandal.

 

Friday's appointment by the supervisory board meeting comes after the previous CEO, Martin Winterkorn, quit the job this week over the scandal, which has damaged the company's reputation and threatens its business.

Volkswagen has admitted to cheating on diesel car emissions test in the U.S. by using a software on 482,000 cars. It has said some 11 million cars worldwide have the software. The company now faces a mountain of difficulties, from class action lawsuits to fixing the software itself.

Mueller, 62, on Friday pledged to do everything to win back the trust of the public.

"We stand by our responsibility," said, adding, however, that "carefulness is even more important than speed."

Mueller said the company would introduce "even tougher compliance rules" and pledged to make VW "an even stronger company."

Winterkorn, who had been CEO since 2007, said he took responsibility for the "irregularities" found by U.S. inspectors in VW's diesel engines, but insisted he had personally done nothing wrong.



Photo Credit: AFP/Getty Images

Locals Push for Permanent PSA Flight 182 Memorial

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Friday marks 37 years since the deadliest aircraft disaster to date in California’s history: the PSA Flight 182 crash over San Diego’s North Park community that killed 144 people.

At 9:03 a.m. – the exact time the plane happened – San Diego city leaders and those impacted by the tragedy gathered at the site of the plane crash to pay tribute to the victims who lost their lives, as they do year after year.

On Sept. 25, 1978, PSA Flight 182 crashed midair with a single-engine Cessna over North Park.

A total of 144 people were killed in the collision, including 135 people aboard PSA Flight 182, two men aboard the Cessna and seven people on the ground. A total of 22 homes in the area were destroyed or damaged as the Boeing 727 hit the ground.

The wreckage came to rest near Boundary and Felton streets.

Though the crash happened nearly four decades ago, the victims lost in the tragedy are never forgotten. Each year, locals gather at the site of the crash and set up a makeshift memorial that includes notes, flowers, candles, victim’s photos and newspaper clippings.

At Friday's ceremony, 144 roses -- one for each victim -- were placed in a wreath during an emotional ceremony attended by loved ones and leaders including Todd Gloria, Toni Atkins and former Mayor Jerry Sanders.

In 2014, residents involved in a PSA Flight 182 committee began a push for a permanent memorial to be erected at the site of the crash. Currently, the closest memorial is a plaque beneath a tree at the North Park library, and some people feel it’s simply not enough given the magnitude of the tragedy.

Resident Myra Pelowski lost her brother in the historic plane crash. He was heading to San Diego attend his first day as a student at the University of California San Diego.

She feels there’s a need for a more permanent place to pay tribute to the victims.

“There is no place for any us to grieve in a proper location,” Pelowski told NBC 7. “So many of our loved ones were unrecognizable.”

Though Pelowski and others on the PSA Flight 182 committee continue to push for a memorial, some residents in the area are concerned over the additional traffic and loitering the memorial might bring.

Michael Bagnas told NBC 7 the committee would ensure all proper steps and procedures are taken to create the memorial and prevent it from negatively impacting the area. Bagnas said the memorial would be good for San Diego, as a whole.

“Anybody who was there that day – everyone remembers it,” Bagnas told NBC 7.

Committee chairman Rick Carlson also supports the building of a permanent memorial.

"I think it's important to the whole city," he said.
 



Photo Credit: NBC 7 San Diego

Bigger SeaWorld Orca Tanks Recommended

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A staff report for the California Coastal Commission recommends the agency allow SeaWorld to double the size of its orca facility at its San Diego park with certain conditions, including that the company promise to never take killer whales from the wild.

The report released Friday will be sent to the commission's 12-member board, which is set to vote on the request at its meeting Oct. 8 in Long Beach.

The staff recommends setting nine conditions that include not housing any orcas captured in the wild after February 2014.

SeaWorld announced plans last year expand its facility amid public criticism over its treatment of whales.

Tens of thousands of people have written to the commission in opposition, saying the orcas should not be held in captivity at all.



Photo Credit: SeaWorld San Diego
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