San Diego News Now

San Diego news; when you want it, where you want it. Get local stories on politics, education, health, environment, the border and more. New episodes are ready weekday mornings. Hosted by Debbie Cruz and produced by KPBS, San Diego and the Imperial County's NPR and PBS station.
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KPBS recently rode along with Father Joe’s Villages street health outreach team to learn more about what it takes to help people move off the street and into shelter. In other news, a quarter of a million dollars from the Biden administration infrastructure bill is coming to Vista. Plus, San Diego County leaders published a blueprint on ways to address the childcare crisis.
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The Street Health Team from Father Joe’s Villages provides care and support to the unsheltered community in downtown San Diego, but as the city enforces its unsafe camping ordinance, the team faces even more challenges. In other news, San Diego State University students react to a sexual assault reported over the weekend. Plus, a group of computer scientists at the University of California San Diego say they have a way to repurpose the tens of millions of smartphones we stop using every year.
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There are plans to move the rail line off the Del Mar Bluffs and into an underground tunnel, but Del Mar residents aren’t too excited about a train running underneath the town. In other news, a San Diego Lifeguard Lieutenant gives us tips on how to stay safe in the water. Plus, a profile of San Diego artists who make art in public, that’s also about the public.
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The first homeless shelter in Oceanside has opened its doors to residents. In other news, a San Diego-based developer wants to convert the city-owned office building at 101 Ash Street into affordable housing. Plus, we have details on some arts events happening in San Diego County this weekend.
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Worker coalitions are pushing state lawmakers to increase the number of minimum paid sick days from three to seven per year. In other news, Tropical Storm Hilary forced more than two billion gallons of polluted storm water into the United States this past weekend. Plus, artwork at Waterfront Park represents inclusion.
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Before there was the Me Too Movement, there was the Bob Filner sexual harassment scandal. KPBS looks back at the allegations against the then San Diego mayor and fallout since he agreed to resign 10 years ago today. In other news, the Biden administration’s already contentious decision to continue with a Trump-era border wall replacement in the San Diego region has sparked another controversy. Plus, hundreds of thousands of students are back in school, after the storm delayed the start of the new year.
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The San Diego Unified School District welcomes more than 100,000 students back to its campuses Tuesday. In other news, we get an update on how Tropical Storm Hilary may have affected the ongoing risk of wildfires in San Diego County. And, over the past decade, members of the Ramona Cemetery District voted to give themselves health benefits.
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San Diego got soaked on Sunday as Tropical Storm Hilary raced through the county. In other news, the average mortgage rate in the United States is the highest it’s been in more than 20 years. Plus, we hear from a poet whose work reflects on the experience of refugee migration from Vietnam.
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Hurricane Hilary is packing wind and drenching rains that are expected to reach San Diego County this weekend. In other news, a marine charged with sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl in his barracks room was in a Camp Pendleton courtroom Thursday, for a preliminary hearing. Plus, DC is opening Blue Beetle this weekend, and positioning the film as the first Latinx superhero on the big screen from a major studio.
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Authorities are still investigating what caused a Planned Parenthood clinic to burn down in El Centro. In other news, a local author headlining this year’s Festival of Books talks about his middle-grade novel, highlighting children struggling with anxiety. Plus, why South Bay artists have struggled to bring performing arts to their community for years.
Debbie Cruz is the local anchor for All Things Considered and the host of the San Diego News Now podcast. Debbie has over 20 years of experience in the news industry. She joined KPBS in 2020.