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  • Underdogs have blown up every bracket in the country in what may be the maddest March ever.
  • Maritime Museum Of San Diego Presents this New Spanish-Themed 2022 Cinco De Mayo Sunset San Salvador Sail This new on-the-water adventure guest experience is hosted by the Maritime Museum of San Diego on Cinco de Mayo, Thursday, May 5. This fun, new festive activity is staged aboard the 16th century galleon replica, San Salvador, a vessel built by Museum staff and volunteers as a representation of Explorer Juan Rodriquez Cabrillo’s vessel, the first European to reach America’s West Coast in 1542. Tickets are $95.00 per person and $170 for couples and include the 2-hour sunset Bay cruise, live music, light Mexican appetizer and specialty tequila cocktail. A cash bar will also be on board. Guests will board at the Maritime Museum of San Diego at 5:00 p.m.
  • President Joe Biden heard from business owners struggling to repair damage to their shops after storms caused devastation.
  • The EPA is planning several different approaches to solving the decades-long cross-border sewage spills that have been plaguing the South Bay. Plus, SANDAG is working on the next transportation plan for the region just as Congress passed a trillion-dollar infrastructure bill. Also, the infrastructure bill is expected to have a long-lasting effect in California and it won't just be fixing roads and modernizing transit projects. Meanwhile, a truck driver training school in Mission Valley is helping to ease the supply-chain bottlenecks by getting more truckers on the road. And, hunger-relief organizations are expecting to benefit from a new California law aimed at reducing food waste. Finally, will the new Padres manager save the beleaguered club?
  • California is in a state of emergency as a brutal heat wave brings the threat of power outages and wildfires.
  • Paul Austin and Tenisha Tate-Austin alleged that an appraiser undervalued their home by nearly $500,000. They got a higher appraisal after they removed evidence that a Black family lived in the home.
  • The saltwater is threatening drinking water supplies in the New Orleans metro area. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers built an underwater levee to stop the intrusion.
  • The United Nations says "famine is at the door" in Somalia with "concrete indications" famine will occur later this year in the southern Bay region.
  • King tides arrive with a new moon, making high tide unusually high and posing the threat of flooding.
  • NPR's Ayesha Rascoe visits the food writer's home to talk and cook. Clark has a new book of recipes promising minimal fuss (and dirty dishes).
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