South Dakota Public Broadcasting says there's an ironic result to President Trump's successful attack on public media: It will have to rely more on NPR programs.
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An appeals court Wednesday extended a stay on a San Diego judge's ruling that would have allowed county restaurants and live adult entertainment venues to reopen amid COVID-19 restrictions.
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The number of Americans seeking unemployment benefits fell by 89,000 last week to a still-elevated 803,000, evidence that the job market remains under stress nine months after the coronavirus outbreak sent the U.S. economy into recession and caused millions of layoffs.
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The sweeping $900 billion pandemic relief package that Congress has approved contains billions in aid directed specifically at struggling small businesses. But even if those businesses get all the money it needs before the end of January, many can't open right away.
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The pandemic has deprived many drag artists of the opportunity to perform in front of live audiences. But one local drag queen says she and others are still finding ways to keep their art alive.
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The surge in holiday travel coincides with the highest peaks of daily COVID-19 cases and deaths in the U.S.
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Bigotry toward Asian Americans and Asian food has spread steadily alongside the coronavirus in the United States. Distorted information about the virus that first appeared in China has led to a revival of century-old tropes about Asian food being dirty.
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San Diego receives its first batch of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine, transportation advocates have high hopes for a major expansion of bus and rail service, and a look back at how KPBS covered the top stories of 2020.
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Officials say more people are stopping their search for work in California amid the coronavirus pandemic. Experts say that contributed to a decline in the state's unemployment rate to 8.3%.
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In 1983, it was just a dream. But Hiroe Otake made it a reality. The woman who founded Sushi Deli restaurants is about to retire after nearly 38 years.
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KPBS Midday EditionJames Floros, the president and CEO of the Jacobs & Cushman San Diego Food Bank, said that last year the organization estimated that one in seven San Diego County residents or 450,000 people were food insecure. This year that estimate has doubled.
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