
Jacob Aere
General Assignment ReporterAs a general assignment reporter, Jacob Aere covers a wide range of different issues that affect the diverse neighborhoods of San Diego County including business, health, arts & culture and politics. Jacob grew up in San Diego and is bilingual in English and Spanish. He is a graduate from the University of British Columbia and has received multiple San Diego Press Club awards.
MORE STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR
-
Black Legacy Now is a San Diego County campaign looking to improve health care treatment for Black mothers and their children in San Diego County.
-
Darrell Issa toured the care site at Palomar Medical Center for overflow COVID-19 patients. The congressman said he was impressed. But the hospital still wonders who will pick up the cost.
-
A North County non-profit is working with local parents to have them fill in as classroom supervisors when the transition back to in-person class takes place.
-
Strong winds forced the outdoor Petco Park vaccination super station to shut down operations for all of Monday and into Tuesday.
-
The Chula Vista COVID-19 vaccination superstation joins one at Petco Park. Each is expected to be able to administer 5,000 vaccines a day, seven days a week.
-
Supervisor Joel Anderson said the new COVID-19 enforcement policy should relieve restaurants and businesses of arbitrary enforcement, by backing action with evidence.
MORE STORIES FEATURING WORK BY THIS AUTHOR
-
The pay increases for Sempra executives came at a time of soaring profits for the company.
-
San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria says he’s proposing the largest infrastructure investment in city history.
-
The special election to fill the remaining months of former Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez's term will be decided in a runoff June 7.
- Trump has a welcome message for new citizens. It's different from past presidents
- Campaign to stop human trafficking wants businesses to help
- San Diego Afghan advocacy group 'surprised' by President Trump's offer
- California cannabis companies hoped Trump would be an ally. Then the raids happened
- How California stepped up to fund a crisis hotline