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  • The destruction of four dams on the lower Klamath river will open up hundreds of miles of salmon habitat. U.S. regulators approved the plan Thursday in a unanimous vote.
  • The Los Angeles City Council has voted to ban homeless encampments within 500 feet of schools and daycare centers.
  • Using pandemic recovery funds from the European Union, Italy is trying to bring back one dying village in each of its regions. The villages will each get $20 million.
  • More than a thousand small businesses have benefitted from a city grant program.
  • In an 84-page lawsuit filed Wednesday in San Francisco Superior Court, the California Attorney General's office said Amazon had effectively barred sellers from offering lower prices for products elsewhere through contract provisions that harm the ability of other retailers to compete.
  • Luke Wood, SDSU's vice president for student affairs and campus diversity, said all in-person classes —200 mostly lab work classes — would move online, and all students who have moved into campus housing would be able to move out if they so choose. Plus, this week across the county, restaurants, gyms, salons and other businesses are reopening with restrictions following new COVID-19 guidelines — But this time businesses are required to take contact information from customers in the event of an outbreak. Also, the City of San Diego has stopped making rent payments on its highly controversial lease of a downtown office building, in a move meant to address what's seen as a huge real estate blunder by the city.
  • Numerous refugees from Ukraine are ending up not in Poland, nor Germany, but in a small city in southern Brazil. And many feel right at home there.
  • For the past six months, former Star Garden dancers have been taking their talents to a show-stopping picket line. If successful, they'll be the only strippers with union representation in the U.S.
  • Shrinkflation isn't new, experts say. But it proliferates in times of high inflation as companies grapple with rising costs for ingredients, packaging, labor and transportation.
  • Councilmember Joe LaCava (District 1) will be speaking at the La Jolla Community Center in a live event on Wednesday November 10 from 6-7:30 p.m. A San Diego native and civil engineer by trade, Joe LaCava has lived in La Jolla since 1985, where he and his wife Lorene, a kindergarten teacher, raised their two daughters. Joe has been a dedicated community advocate over the past 15 years and sat on nearly 30 civic boards, local planning groups and commissions addressing the city budget, land use, infrastructure, public safety, and the environment. In La Jolla, Joe was the Chair of the La Jolla Community Planning Association, was named the honorary Mayor of La Jolla by the Town Council for his civic engagement, and currently sits on the board of Enhance La Jolla. Joe’s city-wide priorities include tackling our infrastructure backlogs, implementing San Diego’s Climate Action Plan, supporting local businesses to jumpstart the economy, and providing sustainable solutions to homelessness. Joe’s priorities for La Jolla and District 1 include providing superior constituent services, reducing emergency response times, and protecting our open spaces. Councilmember Joe LaCava is on Facebook + Instagram + follow @JoeLaCavaD1 on Twitter La Jolla Community Center on Facebook + Instagram
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