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  • Assembly Bill 255 would have allowed cities and counties to spend up to 10% of their state funding on “recovery housing,” where people live in a sober environment and work on overcoming an addiction. The move would have tweaked California’s “housing first” strategy, which generally frowns on programs that put up barriers to housing — such as requiring people to stay clean or participate in treatment.
  • Videos taken by eye witnesses of federal agent encounters with immigrants in Chicago and elsewhere have shown increasingly tense incidents. Immigrant advocates and observers say they're indicative of a larger trend of aggression among federal immigration officers.
  • The Photographer’s Eye Gallery will hold its annual celebration of photographic tradition with “(S)Light of Hand,” a juried exhibition of photographs that use alternative and historic processes. The exhibit, which attracted 500 entries from 100 photographers, will open at 11 a.m. on Sept. 13, with an artists’ reception at 5 p.m., and will close on Oct. 4. Juror Aline Smithson, a Los Angeles-based artist filmmaker, educator and editor whose works have been displayed worldwide, selected San Diego artist Robert Treat as her Juror’s Choice. Donna Cosentino, The Photographer’s Eye director, selected Lynne Buchanan of North Carolina as the Director’s Choice. Treat’s entries were cyanotypes, while Buchanan submitted platinum-palladium prints. “It was a complete privilege to juror the 2025 Alternative Processes Exhibition for the Photographer’s Eye Collective and Gallery,” Smithson said after reviewing the photographs, which came from all over the United States, and from some foreign countries as well. Processes used by photographers included tintype, toned cyanotypes, encaustic photogravure, chlorophyll, and photogram with lumen overprinting. “The winning image by Robert Treat is a masterful combination of cyanotypes, using color and form to create something wholly new that is both art and photography,” Smithson said. Cosentino said she was impressed by Buchanan’s connection with nature and the way she expresses that through photography. “The graceful images that result are elevated through printing them using the warmth of the platinum-palladium process,” she said. “It was a pleasure to see the recent work from her trip to Japan, which embraced the poetry of place.” Fifty photographers will be represented in the exhibit, which will feature two photographs each by Treat and Buchanan, and one photograph by each of the other artists. Each work will be accompanied by an explanation of the process involved to create it. Smithson said it was encouraging to see so many photographers employing different processes to show their creativity. “Over the last decade, we have witnessed a return to alternative and historic processes, particularly reinvigorated during the pandemic, as life afforded us time to slow down,” Smithson said. “But the tactile approach to creating photographic art has been growing steadily over the years, in response to digital photography that removed the artist’s hand from the photographic experience. Using alternative and historical processes has allowed artists to celebrate the imperfect, to experience the physicality of photography, to embrace its unpredictability, and to create unique objects that are artful and meaningful.” Smithson singled out Charlotta Hauksdottir for special mention because she “pushes the boundaries of what a photograph can be.” Hauksdottir’s process involved a pigment print that was hand cut and wrapped around branches. After a decade-long career as a New York fashion editor, Smithson returned to her home city of Los Angeles to undertake her own artistic practice. She has exhibited in 50 solo shows worldwide at institutions ranging from Santa Barbara to Shanghai. Smithson is highly recognized for portraiture, which she shoots almost exclusively on film. The Photographer’s Eye Gallery will honor artists Treat and Buchanan in a separate exhibit of their works next year. The Photographer’s Eye is a nonprofit collective of photographers who strive to enrich the community by conducting shows, classes and workshops; by providing a meeting space; and by offering a rental darkroom. The Photographer’s Eye on Facebook / Instagram
  • Assembly Bill 495 will also bar daycare providers from collecting immigration information about a child or their parents, and allow parents to nominate a temporary legal guardian for their child in family court.
  • In a letter to the San Diego Union-Tribune, Shildt said he is retiring because “the grind of the baseball season has taken a severe toll on me mentally, physically and emotionally.”
  • The strike plan is part of a planned walkout statewide in California and Hawaii involving 31,000 members of the United Nurses Associations of California/Union of Health Care Professionals.
  • Saturday, September 13 from 12 p.m. - 3 p.m. We invite you to enjoy a live performance with the Ballet Folklorico of Los Angeles and Mariachi Fuente Originado en San Diego with Cecy Millan showcasing the mexican music and traditional dances. Don't forget to invite your family for the live show! This event is free and will take place in front of the Food Court. Sábado, Septiembre 13 de 12 p.m. - 3 p.m. Te invitamos a disfrutar del Ballet Folklorico de Los Angeles y Mariachi Fuente Originado en San Diego acompañado de Cecy Millan representando la música mexicana y bailes tradicionales. ¡No olvides invitar a tu familia para disfrutar del show en vivo! El evento es gratuito y se celebra enfrente del Food Court. Las Americas Premium Outlets on Facebook / Instagram
  • With start of the Israel-Hamas ceasefire and release of hostages and prisoners, here are some key figures related to the Gaza war and the Hamas-led attack on Israel that sparked it.
  • For twenty years, transcenDANCE has provided equitable access to dance and performance, and holistic wraparound services, with young people and their families. At “One Dream, Twenty Years” we will mark this important milestone with an evening of celebration and performance! Join us as we gather in community with current students, alumni, staff, board members, funders, and community supporters to reflect on our past success and growth, and to build excitement for our future. 7 p.m.: Doors Open for Pre-Performance Celebration • Food and alcoholic/non-alcoholic beverages available for purchase • Live music with Afro-Cuban band, Ritmo de Plebes! 8 p.m.: Performance and Program • Students and alumni share dance and storytelling • Videos and awards 9:15 p.m. – 11 p.m.: After Party for All • DJ and Dancing • Food and Alcoholic/Non-alcoholic beverages available for purchase • Meet the performers and celebrate with our community! transcenDANCE Youth Arts on Facebook / Instagram
  • City, county and federal government offices across San Diego County will be closed Monday for Indigenous Peoples' Day (formerly Columbus Day), observed annually on the second Monday in October.
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