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  • After two years of isolation and uncertainty, many American teens are struggling with mental health problems. But they're also discovering themselves — and their own resilience.
  • The state agency that handles unemployment benefits pursued lowering costs and hindering fraud over making it easy for workers to access benefits, a new report found.
  • The report found that the county's hunger relief sector is meeting about 75% of the need, and an additional 11.9 million meals per month would be needed to achieve a nutrition-secure San Diego, where everyone has access to enough healthy food.
  • After a Chinese tennis star accused a former Chinese official of assault and temporarily vanished from view, the Women's Tennis Association halted tournaments there. Now the men's group is under fire.
  • The U.S. Supreme Court's opinion in a key environmental case, WV v. EPA, says the federal agency lacks authority to use greenhouse gas emissions caps to force fossil fuel power plants out of business.
  • To block a variant this transmissible, scientists say you need an N95 or other high-filtration mask. Here's how to find a good one and when to wear it.
  • The renewed focus on San Diego's homelessness crisis after a deadly crash downtown, the enormous toll on local small businesses after one year of pandemic closures, and Governor Gavin Newsom's political strategy as a recall effort gains momentum.
  • The U.S. government announced it would allow foreign diesel deliveries to Puerto Rico as it faces a dwindling supply of fuel nearly two weeks after Hurricane Fiona pummeled the U.S. territory.
  • RSVP Now! One Man’s Internment Story – Jack Kubota Saturday, October 2, 2021 • 2-3:30 p.m. Virtual Branch Library This program will be conducted in an interview format after a short history of Japanese American internment is given. Carlsbad resident Jack Kubota was born in Pasadena, California, but moved to the Imperial Valley when he was an infant. His family had a trucking business, and he grew up and attended school in El Centro. In 1942 when he was 13 years old, his family was forced to move to an internment camp at Poston, Arizona. His conversation partner, Linda Canada, is a historian of local history who was the archivist for JAHSSD. Register NowThis fall, Author of the Month will be part of a quarter-long (Sept – Dec) program, The Rebellious Miss Breed: San Diego Public Library & the Japanese American Incarceration featuring San Diego librarian Clara Breed, who fought against the Japanese incarceration during WWII and rose to protest this deeply historic wrong. This project has been made possible with support from California Humanities, a partner of the NEH. Visit calhum.org.
  • California's last operating nuclear power plant could get a second lease on life.
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