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Federal Government -
President
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BY michele nash-hoff
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Tuesday, 07 September 2010 17:34 |
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Many people have questioned whether the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA), commonly referred to as the economic stimulus bill signed into law by President Obama on February 17, 2009, actually created any real jobs. Well, the answer is “yes,” it did in San Diego County.
Out of the $787 billion in stimulus funds, $53 billion went to education and training, of which $3.45 billion was designed for job training. In San Diego County, the ARRA stimulus funds enabled the San Diego Workforce Partnership to offer two new programs through three training subcontractors:
These program are designed to help laid-off workers and unemployed persons find work and help employers find the qualified workers they need, while providing financial reimbursement to help cover training costs. The training options are summarized below:
On-the-Job-Training (OJT)
The OJT training program is designed to help businesses hire and train persons who do not have sufficient experience and knowledge in the jobs for which they are being hired. The employer’s training expenses will be paid as a percentage of the wages the new hire earns during the contracted training period. Program guidelines include:
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Professional Sports -
Pro Football
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BY Johnny McDonald, writing for San Diego Downtown News
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Wednesday, 08 September 2010 10:15 |
When it comes to Chargers fans, love can be a many splendored thing. Fans may eventually deal with tough love if the public is asked to pay $500 million of the estimated $800 million cost for a new downtown stadium.
These are bittersweet denominators for what could be a last-ditch effort to keep the professional football team in town. It may boil down to a referendum in which the citizens will be asked to vote yes or no at the polls.
The new proposed stadium would be publicly owned and privately operated.
Public financing for a stadium would likely come in the form of tax-increment bonds and maybe more if the NFL fails to come up with a promised $100 million. The Chargers would pay a projected $200 million toward the project.
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San Diego Communities -
Point Loma/OB
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BY Anthony Gentile, writing for sdnews.com
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Wednesday, 08 September 2010 10:08 |
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Second forum tackles action plan on homelessness, overall cleanup
OCEAN BEACH — While the tension surrounding homelessness in Ocean Beach has subsided over the last month, community members are still searching for solutions. More than 50 people met at First Baptist Church of Ocean Beach recently for a second faith-based community-led forum — this one geared to move things forward.
“It has cooled off so much I can’t believe it,” said Jack Hamlin, San Diego Restorative Justice Program board chair. “People are talking again. It’s a completely different climate than it was in June.”
The goal of the first forum held in July was more about discussing issues and talking about cleaning up the image of the Ocean Beach community. The most recent forum aimed to lay out a plan for action. At the forum, participants were split into “peace circles” to discuss four categories that were identified as significant during the first forum. Those categories were public facilities, community, government and activities.
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Lifestyle -
Pets
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BY Laura Sanborn, co-founder of Save Our Dogs
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Tuesday, 07 September 2010 18:14 |
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An intense 18-month battle ended in the final hour of the 2009-2010 session of the California state legislature when the Assembly defeated a bill that would have mandated surgical sterilization of most dogs and cats. Sponsored by state Senator Dean Florez (D-Shafter), Senate Bill 250 received only 28 of the 41 votes required for passage.
Assembly offices were flooded in a barrage of calls and letters about SB 250 from Californians. Frustrated lawmakers protested as supporters pushed SB 250 through repeated 'do-over' votes. SB 250 failed to pass the Assembly for the third time since 2009.
In his closing remarks before voting against SB 250, Assembly Majority Leader Charles Calderon (D-Montebello) said, “I can't understand that this bill is about euthanasia -- yet it just won't die."
Like AB 1634, sponsored by Assemblymember Lloyd Levine (D-Van Nuys) in 2007-2008, SB 250 sharply divided the community of animal lovers.
Supporters of SB 250 pointed to municipal animal control costs that total a quarter billion dollars a year in cash-strapped local governments across California, and hundreds of thousands of cats and dogs that are killed in California’s animal shelters – most of them needlessly.
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Political -
California
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BY melody karpinski
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Tuesday, 07 September 2010 17:48 |
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With California elections fewer than eight weeks away, the state’s Democratic candidates began fall’s campaign season with events in Los Angeles and the Bay Area this weekend.
Former governor Jerry Brown met with union members from across the state at a breakfast in downtown Los Angeles Monday, rallying some of his base supporters. Representatives from some of Brown’s key independent expenditure supporters also attended the breakfast, including Working Californians, who recently launched a heavy ad campaign in support of Brown.
Brown faces Republican Meg Whitman in November. Whitman recently surged in the polls, with a Rasmussen report released Aug. 26 giving the former eBay CEO an eight-point lead. Field poll results in July had given Brown a one-point margin over Whitman.
Brown supporters were undeterred by the poll numbers, with one labor representative predicting the election results would leave Whitman broke and empty-handed.
"If we do our job right we are going to drive Meg Whitman so far out of politics that she will have spent all of her money,” said Maria Elena Durazo, in an interview with the Los Angeles Times. Durazo is the executive-secretary treasurer of the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor. “After the election, don't be surprised if we see [Whitman] in an apron asking people if they want fries with their burger," she said.
Brown released his first television ad on Monday, although he told the crowd in Los Angeles that he “[is] not an advertisement.”
After attending the Los Angeles event with Brown, incumbent U.S. Senate candidate Barbara Boxer attended several Bay area events over Labor day weekend, including attending a small picnic in Sonoma County and a larger rally in Oakland.
In her speech at the Sonoma County Democratic party’s barbecue, Boxer criticized opponent Carly Fiorina. She also referenced the Republican’s microphone gaffe, where a tape caught the former CEO of Hewlett Packard calling Boxer’s hairstyle “so yesterday.”
“[Fiorina’s] policies are really what’s ‘so yesterday,’” said Boxer. “My politics are for today and tomorrow.”
Fiorina spokeswoman Andrea Saul disagreed. "Barbara Boxer's failed economic policies are so ineffective she can't even save the jobs of her biggest supporters: big labor," Saul told the Los Angeles Times.
Whitman and Fiorina did not attend any political events on Monday. A Fiorina spokesman said the candidate was traveling abroad over the holiday weekend.
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California Government -
Legislative
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BY Michael M. Rosen
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Monday, 06 September 2010 11:11 |
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On August 30, Chelsea’s Law—a set of measures targeting the worst sexual predators in an effort to prevent future tragedies like those that befell the King, Dubois, and many other families—reached final passage in the state legislature. Its sponsor, Assemblyman Nathan Fletcher (R-San Diego), introduced the bill in April in partnership with Brent and Kelly King, parents of the slain 17-year-old Poway girl after whom it was named. I spoke with Assemblyman Fletcher in the wake of Chelsea’s Law’s passage:
MR: When do you expect Governor Schwarzenegger to sign the bill?
NF: We think it will be soon, possibly, and this could change a hundred times. It could possibly be next week, but constitutionally, it has to happen within next thirty days, so at some point during September. We would like the governor to come to San Diego to sign the bill. It would mean a great deal to the community and the Kings, but he’s obviously fairly busy right now.
MR: You’ve been quoted as saying the bill is “more than we wanted – it’s stronger and broader and more comprehensive today than it was when it was introduced.” Can you explain what's different about the current, passed legislation from the version you introduced?
NF: In a nutshell, when we introduced Chelsea’s law, it was mainly focused on enforcement. Life in prison without parole for violent offenders, lifetime parole for offenders against young, and limits on offenders’ access to parks. These provisions all remain intact in the bill. But we added to them significantly by including a complete reform of parole system and fundamental, structural change as to how we deal with sex offenders.
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