Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

Search results for

  • San Diego County officials are starting to enforce eviction notices for Cedar and Paradise fire victims still living in temporary dwellings three years to the month after they lost their homes. KPBS R
  • City officials head to Los Angeles to find out how their leaders manage their homeless problem. Reporter Amita Sharma has more.
  • The smoking ban at all San Diego beaches and parks goes into effect today. The law was passed in June by the City Council to cut down on litter and second-hand smoke. San Diego Lifeguard John Liddle
  • The California Highway Patrol issued 28,000 speeding tickets to drivers on San Diego freeways last year. That's a big number, but it is down from the year before. The CHP says the number of accidents
  • The FCC wants to know if radio programmers at Clear Channel Communications Inc., CBS Radio Inc., Entercom Communications Corp. and Citadel Broadcasting Corp. received cash or gifts in exchange for playing songs without disclosing such a deal.
  • Thousands of Latino students continue to stage walkouts across Los Angeles to protest the proposed toughening of immigration laws. Local authorities and school officials are working to keep the students in class.
  • San Diego sheriff's deputies arrested 150 students who walked out of school in Imperial Beach today. They rallied against proposed federal immigration reform legislation. KPBS Reporter Amita Sharma ha
  • The 78-year-old lawyer shot by Vice President Dick Cheney in a hunting accident has birdshot lodged in his heart and had "a minor heart attack" Tuesday morning. Harry Whittington, was immediately moved back to ICU for further treatment.
  • The White House defends its decision to wait 22 hours to inform the public that Vice President Cheney had accidentally sprayed his hunting partner with birdshot. President Bush found out about the incident Saturday evening, but the media wasn't informed until Sunday.
  • Senators sharply question federal safety officials during a hearing on one of the nation's biggest mine disasters in 20 years. Labor subcommittee members asked why the Sago mine was not shut down for past violations. They also wanted to know if communications technology could have saved lives.
112 of 113