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CAL FIRE's New App Will Help San Diegans Prepare for Season

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CAL FIRE has launched a new app that educates people on wildfire safety and sends alerts about wildfires in a user’s region.

The “Ready for Wildfire” app has a library of easy step-by-step checklists to help protect your home. The app guides homeowners on fire resistant construction, how to assemble an emergency kit, how to create an evacuation plan, and much more.

California is once again heading into wildfire season. Firefighters across the state are preparing for another potentially destructive wildfire season.

For those worried about wildfires nearby in the coming months, the app provides wildfire alerts as well. 

San Diegans can customize the app to receive alerts only for their region. Hikers, bikers and those who spend time outdoors can enable an alert system for wildfires within 30 miles of your device. 

There is a map to see all current fires, with information on their size and containment percentage.

“One of the many benefits of our new Ready for Wildfire app is the timely and accurate information it provides to residents about a wildfire in their area,” said Chief Ken Pimlott, CAL FIRE director and California’s state forester, in a statement. “I am excited about this new valuable tool that will provide early alerts to the public to help ensure their safety.”

If you download the app before May 21, you can enter the Ready for Wildfire Sweepstakes for a chance to win up $10,000. The grand prize winner will be able to purchase home hardening materials to prepare their home against wildfire and flying embers. The promotion is sponsored and funded by iHeartMedia in partnership with the Ready for Wildfire Campaign.

For more information visit ReadyForWildfire.org or ReadySanDiego.org.


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Obama to Make 1st Post-Presidency Appearance at U of Chicago

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Former President Barack Obama is scheduled to make his first public appearance since leaving the White House on Monday, with plans to hold a conversation at the University of Chicago.

Obama is expected to discuss community organizing and civic engagement with “young leaders from area schools,” according to a release announcing the event.

Beginning at 11 a.m. at the school’s Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts, the discussion is invitation-only, but a television feed will be provided.

"This event is part of President Obama’s post-presidency goal to encourage and support the next generation of leaders driven by strengthening communities around the country and the world," his office said in a statement.

Former advisors said the 44th commander in chief is not expected to criticize current President Donald Trump, who has tried to dismantle several of Obama's chief accomplishments, including the Affordable Care Act.

Instead, Obama will focus on supporting activism in the “next generation of leaders.”

“His mission is going to be to inspire these young people and there’ll be a diverse group, including Republicans as well as Democrats, but to inspire them to take ownership of this political process and really get involved,” said former White House advisor David Axelrod, who now serves as the director of the University of Chicago’s Institute of Politics.

Several students at the South Side campus said they were eager to hear from Obama, who has been seen attending various events since leaving office, but has yet to make a public appearance in any official capacity.

“I’d like to see if he has anything in store for Chicago as a city, because I think there are a lot of things going on right now that I’d like to hear his opinion about,” said U of C student Zoe Dervin.

“I’d just be interested to hear sort of how he is going to be involved now that he’s in a different role,” another student added.

Monday’s event will serve as another homecoming of sorts in several ways, as the former president taught constitutional law at the Hyde Park institution for several years before entering politics.

The University of Chicago will also house his future presidential library, to be built in nearby Jackson Park – both conveniently located near the Obama family’s home in the Kenwood neighborhood.

Obama was last in Chicago in February for meetings on his library, according to a source. That visit marked his first hometown trip since delivering his final address in office from McCormick Place in January.

“I’m immensely proud that his last speech as president was here in the city of Chicago and his first major address in his post-presidency is here in the city of Chicago,” Mayor Rahm Emanuel said Friday.

Obama was expected to arrive in Chicago on Sunday. While details of his schedule outside Monday’s event were not immediately available, former first lady and Chicago native Michelle Obama was not expected to accompany him.



Photo Credit: Getty Images, File

Weekly San Diego Sports Preview

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Here’s a look at what is going on in San Diego sports for the week of April 24th-30th.

PADRES: The Friars wrap up the first month of the season on the road against National League West foes. Monday-Thursday they’re in Arizona to face the Diamondbacks. Friday-Sunday they head up north the San Francisco to face the Giants.

GULLS: The Gulls are back in the nest Friday for game three of the first round of the Calder Cup Playoffs. They host Ontario at 7 p.m.

UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEGO TOREROS:

-BASEBALL: Tuesday vs. UC Irvine 6 p.m. at Fowler Park, Friday and Saturday at Loyola Marymount 6 p.m. and Sunday 1 p.m.

-WOMEN’S TENNIS: Thursday-Saturday at the WCC Championships in Claremont.

-MEN’S TENNIS: Thursday-Saturday at the WCC Championships in Claremont.

-SOFTBALL: Friday at BYU 5 p.m., Saturday at BYU 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.

-WOMEN’S ROWING: Saturday and Sunday at the WIRA Champions in Gold River, California and Saturday at the Dale Cup in Bloomington, Indiana.

-WOMEN’S TRACK: Saturday at the Steve Scott Invite in Irvine.

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SAN DIEGO TRITONS:

-MEN’S GOLF: Monday-Wednesday at the CCAA Championships at City of Industry.

-BASEBALL: Thursday and Friday at Cal State L.A. 6 p.m. and Saturday at Cal State L.A. 1 p.m. and 4:30 p.m.

-WOMEN’S WATER POLO: Friday-Sunday at the WWPA Championship in Geneva, Ohio.

-SOFTBALL: Friday at Stanislaus State 2:30 p.m. and 4:30 p.m. and Saturday at Stanislaus State 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.

-MEN’S ROWING: Saturday and Sunday at the WIRA Championships in Rancho Cordova.

-MEN’S TENNIS: Saturday-Sunday at NCAA Regionals.

-WOMEN’S TENNIS: Saturday-Sunday at NCAA Regionals.

SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY AZTECS:

-BASEBALL: Tuesday vs. UC Riverside 6 p.m., Friday vs. New Mexico 6 p.m., Saturday vs. New Mexico 2 p.m. and Sunday vs. New Mexico 1 p.m. all at Tony Gwynn Stadium.

-WOMEN’S TRACK: Thursday-Saturday at the Penn Relays in Philadelphia and Friday and Saturday at Adidas/Steve Scott Invitational in Irvine.

-WOMEN’S TENNIS: Thursday-Sunday vs. TBD in Las Vegas.

-SOFTBALL: Friday and Saturday at Utah State 3 p.m. and Sunday at Utah State 11 a.m.

-WOMEN’S WATER POLO: Friday-Sunday at Golden Coast Conference Championship in Santa Clara.

-MEN’S TENNIS: Friday-Sunday at the Mountain West Championship in Boise, Idaho.

-WOMEN’S ROWING: Saturday and Sunday at Western Intercollegiate Rowing Association Championships in Gold River, California.

POINT LOMA NAZARENE UNIVERSITY SEA LIONS:

-WOMEN’S GOLF: Monday-Wednesday at the PacWest Championships in Turtle Bay, Hawaii.

-BASEBALL: Tuesday at Cal State Dominguez Hills 3 p.m., Friday at Academy of Art 6 p.m. and 9 p.m. and Saturday at Academy of Art 2 p.m. and 5 p.m.

-TRACK: Friday and Saturday vs. PacWest Conference Meet at PLNU.



Photo Credit: Getty Images

Water Main Breaks at UCSD Warehouse in Miramar

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A water main broke in a UC San Diego warehouse in the 7800 block of Trade Street Sunday morning, according to the San Diego Fire Department.

The water pressure was so strong against the warehouse doors it turned on the alarm, according to management. 

The water has was shut off by the City about 30 minutes after the call came in to management.

"My coworkers called me around nine o'clock, saying we've got a water main break and the water's up about two, four inches on the floor in the whole warehouse, and we needed everybody, all hands to come in," Armando Escobodo, moving service coordinator for UCSD told NBC 7. 

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The 160,000-square foot warehouse (of which 60,000 square feet flooded) is now drying out, and most of the damaged property, including lab equipment and office supplies, has been removed. 

The damage will be assessed next week. 



Photo Credit: SDFD
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Video Shows Killer Whales Feasting in Monterey Bay

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A rare sighting in the animal kingdom continues to mesmerize marine biologists and whale watchers in the Monterey Bay.

For the fourth day in a row, whale watchers on Sunday spotted an abnormally large pod of killer whales feasting on the carcasses of two gray whales, according to Nancy Black from Monterey Bay Whale Watch.

Killer whales are famous for their violent attacks and relentless feeding practices, but to see this type of behavior and this amount of mammal-eating creatures just off the coast of Monterey is "pretty rare," Black said.

"This won't happen everyday," she said.

The first gray whale's carcass was originally discovered last Thursday followed by another carcass appearing Friday, according to Black.

Ever since Thursday, throngs of killer whale mothers and calves have taken turns taking bites out of the dead whales' blubber.

An array of whale species typically migrate to Monterey Bay during the spring months for feeding season, according to Black. Killer whales tend to hunt in groups of six to ten, but Black said the group this year is a "very large number."

Not to be outdone, Humpback whales also joined the mix. Black said Humpback whales tend to barge into the fold when killer whales feed.



Photo Credit: Monterey Bay Whale Watch
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Family Returns Home 1 and a Half Years After Tragic Fire

San Diego Tax Return Preparer Sentenced to 3 years in Prison

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Marla Lynn Cunningham, a tax return preparer, was sentenced to 37 months in federal prison for preparing fake tax returns, announced Acting Deputy Assistant Attorney General Stuart M Goldberg of the Justice Department’s Tax Division.

She owned and operated Cunningham’s Tax Service in El Cajon. From 2010 to 2012, Cunningham prepared fake returns for her clients that reported phony business losses, charitable contributions, and medical, dental, education and unreimbursed employee expenses. She caused a tax loss of more than $1.2 million.

She was arrested in 2015 on 36 counts and pled guilty to three of those counts in December 2016.

After three years in prison, Cunningham is ordered to serve one year of supervised release and will pay $91,867 in restitution to the IRS.



Photo Credit: Getty Images

Thousands Attend Earth Day in Balboa Park

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They recycled, conserved and educated in Balboa Park Sunday – all in honor of Earth Day. Thousands of tree huggers and terra firma lovers came together to celebrate the park’s 28th annual fair.

The event included cooking demonstrations, an arts and crafts show, children’s events and even a "canna village" made up of vendors in the cannabis industry. Automakers also got to show off the latest in energy efficient cars.

“We have to protect this earth,” Earth Day participant Kennee Moore told NBC 7. “This is where we live. You don't throw trash inside your home. Don't throw trash in the earth that we live.”

Government agencies and nonprofit groups hosted education booths to promote conservation during the fair, and the highlight of the event was the children’s parade.

“That's great to see so many people out here marching and so many young people out here marching, because it starts with them," another participant said. 

The Earth Fair in Balboa Park is the largest free environmental fair in the world, according to event organizers.



Photo Credit: NBC 7

Trump Hosting UN Security Council Meeting at White House

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President Donald Trump is expected to host members of the United Nations Security Council with a White House meeting Monday, NBC News reported.

The ambassadors of the 15-member group are expected to have coffee with members of Congress in the morning and then head to the White House to meet and have lunch with the president, sources told NBC News.

North Korea will likely be a major topic of discussion, as the North continues to test its nuclear missiles and threaten other countries.

U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley is expected to attend the gathering. She is serving this month as the president of the Security Council, a role that rotates each month.



Photo Credit: Andrew Harnik, AP Photo, File

Blessings Box in Santee Built by Community, For Community

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Give what you can and take what you need.That's the message behind a new “blessings box” in Santee.The concept is simple: anyone can donate food, toiletries or baby supplies,and those donations, in turn, are free to take, no questions asked.

Photo Credit: NBC 7 San Diego

Blessing Box: Give What You Can, Take What You Need

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Give what you can and take what you need.

That's the message behind a new “blessings box” in Santee.

The concept is simple: anyone can donate food, toiletries or baby supplies,and those donations, in turn, are free to take, no questions asked.

The box, designed by the community, for the community, sits outside the Santee Methodist Church on North Magnolia Street.

The box is designed to help people that may need a little something before their next paycheck, but are unable to come into the church or go somewhere else for help. 

The creator of the blessings box, Miranda Williams, was inspired to create the service from her own experience growing up.

"When I was younger, I did have a need and I was not comfortable asking in front of my church or even at school, I did not want people to know that my family did not have money, maybe sometimes not having lunch or something like that,” she told NBC7. “This would've appealed to me and I think that is the appeal to the community."

She said if she had something like this growing up, she would have felt comfortable taking something without feeling embarrassed. 

"Unfortunately there is a stigma with not having enough, especially children," Williams said. "You feel like, I don't want people to know my family doesn't have money."

The box has been up and running for two weeks. Anyone is free to donate to come take something they need. 



Photo Credit: NBC 7 San Diego

Man Seriously Hurt in Pacific Beach Knife Fight Dies: SDPD

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A man who suffered multiple wounds from a knife fight in a Pacific Beach motel has died, San Diego police (SDPD) homicide detectives said. 

The reported fight happened on Friday, April 14 at Motel San Diego, located at 4780 Mission Bay Drive, right off Interstate 5. San Diego police first responded to a call of a reported knife fight at approximately 7:45 p.m. 

The first officers on scene found a man, identified as Joaquin Tuttle, 40, of San Diego, in a room with multiple lacerations on his head and arm, in addition to blunt force trauma to his rib cage from an assault. 

Tuttle was taken to Scripps La Jolla for treatment. 

San Diego police learned on Friday that Tuttle had passed away earlier that day, police said Sunday. The Medical Examiner has his body and will determine the manner of death and cause of death.

SDPD Homicide Detectives have been assigned the case and are investigating. 

There is no suspect in custody at this time.  

Anyone with information regarding this incident is asked to call the Homicide Unit at (619) 531-2293 or Crime Stoppers at (888) 580-8477.



Photo Credit: Google Maps

Popular San Diego Beach Reopened After Sewage Spill

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County health officials have reopened all of La Jolla's popular WindanSea Beach after approximately 1,000 gallons of sewage spilled into the water. 

The County of San Diego's Department of Environmental Health said sample results from the City's Microbiology Lab showed that the parts of the beach they closed on Thursday were safe for recreational use. 

The beach stretching from Nautilus Street to Marine Street had been closed for days. The stretch of beach is about 2,000 feet long. 

A ruptured force main at a pump station on the 100 block of Fern Glen at Vista Del Mar, adjacent to the beach, spilled approximately 1,000 gallons of sewage into the water. 


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Timeline of Events in Killing of Jake Merendino

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Here is a collection of key dates and times in the killing of Jake Merendino and the investigation into the role of David Enrique Meza and his girlfriend, Taylor Marie Langston in the killing.

April 7, 2017 - Meza goes on trial for murder in federal court in San Diego, California.

February 24, 2017 - Langston entered a plea agreement with federal officials regarding her case. The San Diego Union-Tribune reported Langston pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to obstruct justice.

December 24, 2015 - Meza and Langston plead not guilty when indicted on charges of conspiracy to obstruct justice and lying to a federal officer.

December 23, 2015 - David Enrique Meza and his girlfriend, Taylor Marie Langston, are arrested at their apartment in Imperial Beach, California.

June 4, 2015 - Federal agents executed a search warrant at Meza's apartment.

May 18, 2015 - Meza sought to probate a holographic will in Texas, naming himself as the sole beneficiary of the Merendino estate, according to court documents.

7 p.m., May 2, 2015 - Meza and Langston return to the Bobby’s by the Sea hotel in the black SUV without license plates, according to the FBI.

4:22 a.m., May 2, 2015 - Langston crosses into the U.S. in a black SUV with no license plates, according to the FBI.

3:57 a.m., May 2, 2015 - Meza crosses into the United States on his motorcycle, according to the FBI

3:33 a.m., May 2, 2015 – Merendino’s body is found in a ravine near the highway that links Rosarito and Ensenada, according to the FBI

1 a.m., May 2, 2015 - Merendino tells hotel security he is leaving to help a friend stranded on the road. This is the last time he is seen alive, according to the FBI.

10:30 p.m., May 1, 2015 – A motorcycle is heard leaving the hotel parking lot, according to the FBI.

7 p.m., May 1, 2015 - Merendino goes down to the lobby between 7 p.m. and 8 p.m. to open a bottle of wine, FBI agents said.

May 1, 2015 - Merendino closes escrow on a luxury oceanfront condo in Baja.

April 29, 2015 - Meza and Merendino rent a car at a Spring Valley agency, FBI investigators said, and drove across the border to Mexico to close the deal on the $300,000 condo at Palacio del Mar, an upscale development between Rosarito and Ensenada.

April 2015 – Co-defendant Taylor Marie Langston, Meza's fiance, was 9 months pregnant according to court documents.

2013 - Meza and Merendino meet online and become involved in a romantic relationship, FBI investigators said.



Photo Credit: Facebook

April Is Back! World-Famous NY Giraffe Cam Returns This Week

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Devoted fans of April the giraffe lost their link to her on Friday when her round-the-clock live stream went dark -- but it turns out she's coming back this week for a limited engagement.

Animal Adventure Park's "Giraffe Cam" was turned off at 4:30 p.m. ET Friday, almost two months after the pregnant giraffe was catapulted onto the world stage.

But this weekend, the Harpursville, New York, zoo she calls home said her withdrawal from public life was only temporary.

"The Giraffe Cam is not gone forever! This week we will announce viewing day/times for you to check in and watch progress!" the zoo said in a Facebook post Sunday morning.

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Since late February, April's daily eating, sleeping, strolling, camera-licking and tail-flicking was broadcast to a loyal and adoring audience waiting in anticipation to see her deliver her fourth calf. 

After a patient wait, the male calf was born earlier this month, to the delight of a global live audience that has sometimes numbered in the tens of millions.

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Animal Adventure Park is offering the public a chance to give him a name at nameaprilscalf.com, where anyone who wants to vote on a name can do so for $1 per vote. There is a five-vote minimum, and people can vote as many times as they want. 

The zoo said Sunday that the first round of results from the naming contest would be revealed early this week, with a winner tentatively scheduled for May 1.

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Funds raised will be split between the Giraffe Conservation Foundation, Ava's Little Heroes and Animal Adventure Park. 

April's little calf stands 5 feet, 9 inches tall and weighs about 130 pounds, Animal Adventure Park reports. 

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"All is well and baby continues to grow, he is now looking us in the eyes!" they said Sunday.

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April, 15, teased her millions of global adorers for weeks before he was born, showing signs of near-but-not-quite labor and enchanting her audience with cute right-at-the-camera gazes and tongue flicks, snack noshing and nuzzling with her much younger 5-year-old beau Oliver. 

April's pregnancy was originally vaulted into global headlines in late February after YouTube briefly yanked the zoo's live stream following complaints by animal activists that it violated the site's policies concerning "nudity and sexual content." Thousands upon thousands of social media users voiced their frustration on Facebook and YouTube, and the stream was restored within an hour or so.

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Animal Adventure Park owner Jordan Patch said the natural curiosity surrounding giraffes and their birthing process was a huge factor in drawing crowds. 

"I think the fact that she's a giraffe and she's a neat species that people are interested in, that's fostered a lot of the attention," he said. "The fact that you'll get to witness the miracle of birth from an animal that you really don't get to see give birth — that's neat."

He added that April's pregnancy was more than just live entertainment, but a teachable moment and source for education.



Photo Credit: Animal Adventure Park via AP
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This Cat's Showdown With Rattler is Your Monday Motivation

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Police in South Texas say a recent close call should serve as a warning for residents to keep a watchful eye out for snakes.

The Laguna Vista Police Department, near South Padre Island, posted photos on Facebook showing a large rattlesnake catching some sun on a busy walking trail. Officers were able to relocate the rattler to a safe spot away from walkers and one particularly brave cat.

"Generally, rattlesnakes emerge from hibernation in March or April, or when the average daytime temperatures reach and remain about 60F and higher," the post read.

They're most active when temperatures reach into the 90s.



Photo Credit: Laguna Vista PD
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SoccerCity Proposal Turned in With 118,000 Signatures

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With 500 boxes of petitions stacked up containing the signatures of more than 118,000 San Diegans, the SoccerCity Proposal was submitted Monday.

Goal SD, the local group behind the privately-funded SoccerCity proposal, submitted the plan to the San Diego City Council, according to the group. It could either be approved or sent to a public vote.

Nick Stone, the project manager for Goal SD and a few partners including Steve Altman and Landon Donovan, delivered the petition boxes to the San Diego County Registrar of Voters at 10:30 a.m.

"Number one sport in the world -- it is hands down the single most popular sport in the world," said Stone.

"With the delivery of these signatures, we're effectively now showing the level of support in the community for this project," Stone told NBC 7. "This will allow us to go in record time frame to the ballot."

They need 71,646 of the signatures to be confirmed as valid for the popular proposal to go through the council. Stone says it should take about 30 days for the checks to be completed.

"It provides a new professional sports franchise to town, and it does it in a way that doesn't ask for a penny of taxpayers' dollars to bring sports to the city of San Diego," said Stone.

Stone also believes that the SoccerCity proposal could help attract extra funding for local schools.

"It creates a massive tax base and a real solution for San Diego State University," said Stone. "The huge tax base will help fund the schools who are obviously out today with yet more news of cuts."

The plan is to privately fund a spacious river park, a multi-use stadium for professional soccer and college football, a sports and entertainment district with restaurants, bars and shops, as well as other office space, according to the group.

The 166-acre site would be designed for joint use, conveniently located alongside the San Diego Trolley Line.



Photo Credit: NBC 7

Marlins Ride Big Inning to Series Win

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When the wheels come off for the Padres they really come off fast and fly all over the place. In the span of six batters on Sunday the Friars went from a 3-run lead to a 3-run deficit en route to a 7-3 loss to the Marlins at Petco Park.

Padres right-hander Luis Perdomo came off the disabled list to make his second start of the season and was scoreless through 5.0 innings. He had a 3-0 lead to work with courtesy of an RBI single by Yangervis Solarte and a towering 2-run home run by Hunter Renfroe, a 410-foot blast to straightaway centerfield.

But just like in his first start of the season against the Giants, things went sour for Perdomo in the 6th inning. He gave up a single to Martin Prado, walked Christian Yelich and served up a single to Giancarlo Stanton to make it a 3-1 game. Padres Manager Andy Green went and got Perdomo, replacing him with Craig Stammen, who needed 11 pitches to allow a double, a single and then a monster 2-run home run to Justin Bour.

Six hitters up, six hitters in and the Marlins had a 6-3 lead. Kevin Quackenbush, who is looking a lot like the guy the Padres through was closer material just a couple of years ago before struggling and bouncing up and down between Petco Park and Triple-A El Paso, came in and got six straight outs. Quack has not allowed an earned run yet in 2017.

The other positive offensive note for the Padres was rookie centerfielder Manuel Margot, who singled twice and was on base three times.

The Padres lose their first home series of the season and now hit the road again. They start a 4-game series in Arizona on Monday with Jhoulys Chacin on the mound against Zack Greinke.

California Gears Up to Fight Trump on Car Emissions

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Even as President Trump pulls back on regulations governing car emissions, part of a broader policy of overturning environmental protections enacted by the Obama administration, California is determinedly headed in the opposite direction with stricter rules it alone is authorized to enact.

During a visit to Detroit last month, Trump halted the imposition of standards that would cut car emissions almost in half by 2025, including greenhouse gases that are responsible for global warming. The administration instead will reopen a review of the standards at the request of the major automakers, giving them the chance to argue that the rules should be eased.

"This is going to be a new era for American jobs and job creation," Trump said in Detroit.

But California is moving forward with the more stringent tailpipe rules, setting up an expected showdown with the Trump administration. A week after Trump's announcement, the California Air Resources Board not only voted to reaffirm the standards and but also began to consider new ones to take effect after 2025. Likely to join the fight will be the dozen other states that follow California's standards rather than the national ones. States can choose either.

"The Trump administration really is very aggressively proclaiming that we should not be addressing climate change at the federal level," said Sean B. Hecht, the co-executive director of the Emmett Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at the UCLA School of Law. "And the auto companies have taken this as an opportunity…to say, 'Hold on, let's try to back out of this deal where we have these federal fuel economy standards through 2025.'"

Trump has had a mixed record in his first 100 days in office. He began dismantling former President Barack Obama's major climate change policy, the Clean Power Plan, with an executive order lifting carbon restrictions, but has made little headway on many of his other campaign promises. His travel ban is tied up in the courts and an overhaul of Obamacare was withdrawn from the House because it had little support. Now California and other, mostly blue states are vowing to fight any easing of regulations governing car emissions.

California needs to control emissions to meet its ambitious plans for battling climate change, with zero-emission vehicles such as electric cars from Tesla and Chevrolet part of the mix. Last year, legislators passed a bill requiring that by 2030, the state cut its greenhouse gas emissions to 40 percent below its 1990 levels. To send a message about their willingness to take on Trump, Democratic leaders of the California legislature hired former Attorney General Eric Holder to represent them in legal fights with the White House.

California Gov. Jerry Brown and the state's other top Democrats called Trump's move to roll back the emissions standards a cynical ploy.

"President Trump's decision today to weaken emission standards in cars is an unconscionable gift to polluters," Brown wrote to the EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt on March 15. "Once again you've put the interests of big oil ahead of clean air and politics ahead of science."

Electricity production accounted for most of the greenhouse gases produced in 2014 at 30 percent, but transportation was right behind at 26 percent, according to the Environmental Protection Agency's website. In California, that percentage was even higher: Transportation generated 37 percent of its emissions in 2014.

"For sure California is gearing up," said Deborah Sivas, an environmental litigator at Stanford Law School. "Part of it depends on the next moves by the administration."

The EPA did not respond to a request for comment about its plans for the emissions standards. In a statement last month, Pruitt said that along with the Department of Transportation, the EPA would consider whether the emissions standards were good not only for the environment but also for consumers.

"These standards are costly for automakers and the American people," he said. "We will work with our partners at DOT to take a fresh look to determine if this approach is realistic."

Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao echoed his statement, calling Trump's position a "win" for the American people.

Attempts to undercut the standards will prompt drawn-out litigation from states such as California or New York, Sivas predicted. To reverse an earlier decision, the EPA will have to go through the same series of elaborate steps that were taken to put the rules into place.

"They can't just say, 'Oh yeah, well forget that,'" Sivas said.

California earned its unique authority to set regulations tougher than national ones through its pioneering efforts to curb air pollution. When Congress amended the Clean Air Act in 1970, it gave the EPA authority to restrict air pollution from tailpipes as a way to tackle smog. But because California had established its own laws a decade earlier, and because it successfully argued that its air pollution was naturally worse than other states', it was given special status in the law. California may ask the EPA administrator for a waiver to restrict pollution more stringently than the federal government if, in the law's language, the state's standards are at least as protective of public health and welfare and needed to meet compelling and extraordinary conditions.

The EPA has denied California's request for a waiver just once, during the administration of President George W. Bush, when California first moved to regulate greenhouse gases in addition to more traditional pollutants. California sued but the case was never decided because Obama was elected.

If the Trump administration were to deny future waivers, California would certainly push back. 

Hecht said that in the past, California has argued that it has compelling and extraordinary circumstances because it has a very large economy and sells many cars, and so its efforts to reduce greenhouse gases will make a difference. It also has said that climate change will have specific, negative effects on the state: the loss of the snow pack which will threaten its water supply, for example.

"They were accepted by the Obama administration, and the question will be, Will California win that court fight?'" he said.

Nor is there anything in the law giving the EPA administrator the authority to withdraw a waiver already granted.

"It doesn't speak to the issue one way or the other," said Richard Frank, an environmental law professor at the University of California-Davis.

The Trump administration would likely argue that it has the discretion to revoke any waivers granted by a previous administration, while California would say that absent specific language in the law, the EPA lacks the authority, he said.

"Given all that it will be tough for EPA to say we're going to rescind your waiver," Sivas said. "So I think California has the upper hand in that fight if it comes down to that."

At Pruitt's confirmation hearing, he refused to commit to keeping the waiver in place. Pressed by California's Sen. Kamala D. Harris, a Democrat, he said, "I don't know without going through the process to determine that. One would not want to presume the outcome."

If the Trump administration were to try to withdraw the waiver, Sivas thought California would win in court.

"It's pretty clear under the statue that the deference goes to California not to the EPA on whether the waiver is appropriate," she said. "The Congress wrote the statute that way."

The EPA has already concluded both that elevated levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere "may reasonably be anticipated to endanger" public health and that emissions from new cars contribute to the dangerous levels of greenhouse gases.

The so-called "endangerment finding" came about after Massachusetts sued the EPA under the George W. Bush administration to force it to regulate carbon dioxide emissions. The U.S. Supreme Court determined that greenhouse gases fit well within the Clean Air Act's "capacious definition of 'air pollutant,'" meaning the EPA had the statutory authority to regulate their emissions from new cars and other vehicles.

When it was challenged, the finding was upheld in a federal court, and the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal.

"It is there, and it needs to be enforced and respected," Pruitt said during his confirmation hearing. "There is nothing that I know that would cause it to be reviewed."

Massachusetts — which along with Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington follow California's lead — is committed to the stricter standards, said Ed Coletta, a spokesman for the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection.

As with California, Massachusetts is relying on lower car emissions to achieve its climate change goals. The administration of Republican Gov. Charlie Baker wants to place 300,000 zero-emission vehicles on the road in Massachusetts by 2025 as part of a multi-state effort.

"Any weakening of those standards would raise concerns about Massachusetts' ability to meet emissions reduction goals and maintain ozone standards," Coletta said.

New York's Department of Environmental Conservation also said it would stick with the California standards to try to reduce greenhouse gas emissions 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2030, and 80 percent by 2050.

"While federal leadership is essential, New York will not stand idly by while clean air protections are eviscerated, and will take any and all actions necessary to ensure public health and our environment are protected," it said.

Meanwhile, the attorneys general of eight of the states plus the District of Columbia and Pennsylvania's Department of Environmental Protection criticized Trump's position as a dramatic wrong turn for the country that would undermine successful efforts to combat pollution.

"An extensive technical study by the Environmental Protection Agency already found that the standards are fully and economically achievable by the auto industry," their March 16 statement said. "Relaxing them would increase the air pollution that is responsible for premature death, asthma, and more – particularly in our most vulnerable communities."

The standards that Trump wants to ease were set in 2012 in an ambitious effort that also created consistency across the country. The agreement, which grew out of an accord that Obama crafted in 2009 after the financial melt-down, brought together the Obama administration, the car manufacturers and the California Air Resources Board. The rules require each company's fleet of vehicles for the model years 2022 through 2025 to achieve on average 54.5 miles per gallon and they enable the manufactures to avoid making two versions of vehicles for different states.

As part of the agreement, the EPA undertook an evaluation mid-way through the period, but expedited its analysis just before Obama's term ended. In November, with Trump about to take office, it announced it would leave the regulations in place.

That decision left many of the car companies crying foul, saying the review had been rushed, and urging Trump to intervene and weaken the standards. Manufactures warned of price hikes over what consumers could pay, and the loss of 1 million automotive jobs, and pointed to the popularity of pickup trucks and other less fuel-efficient vehicles.

"The Trump Administration has created an opportunity for decision-makers to reach a thoughtful and coordinated outcome predicated on the best and most current data," the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers said in a statement after Trump’s announcement.

Now that the review has been reopened, a final decision from the EPA could come as late as April 2018.

Meanwhile in court, the alliance is arguing that the EPA's speeded up review was arbitrary and capricious. California responded by asking the U.S. District Court for the D.C. Circuit that it be allowed to defend the feasibility of the standards in court.

An earlier analysis by the EPA found that the standards would reduce oil consumption by nearly 40 billion gallons of refined gasoline and diesel fuel, decrease greenhouse gas emissions by 540 million metric tons and save consumers more than $1,650 per vehicle, the California politicians said.

"Your action to weaken vehicle pollution standards — standards your own members agreed to —breaks your promise to the American people," Brown wrote to the automobile manufacturers. "Please be advised that California will take the necessary steps to preserve the current standards and protect the health of our people and the stability of our climate."



Photo Credit: Getty Images

Child Hospitalized With Bites From Family's Dog in Vista

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A child was injured and hospitalized from dog bites in Vista, confirmed the San Diego Humane Society on Monday.

The victim was taken to Rady's Children Hospital after being attacked by the family's dog. Medics were sent to the child's home, located on the 1000 block of Rhea Pl. at about 5 p.m. Sunday.

San Diego County Sheriff's deputies also responded to the incident.

The child appears to have been about four or five years old, and the dog was an American Staffordshire Terrier, said an official from the San Diego Humane Society.

After attacking the child, the dog will be quarantined for 10 days.

An investigation is underway with the Humane Society. Further information on the child's condition or how the investigation will proceed was not immediately available.



Photo Credit: NBC 7
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