‘They are my angels’: Escaping violence and traffickers, this Colombian family is now calling San Jose home
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 13:38:07 GMT
Jasbleidy Montejo and her husband were so close to their dream of finding a new beginning — and a safer world for their six-month-old daughter — in the U.S.But after the family had made it thousands of miles from their home in Colombia, violence found them again. In San Luis Rio Colorado, a border town in Mexico, a group of men ordered them off the bus they were traveling on. They shoved them in SUVs with hoods over their heads and told them they had just three days to come up with thousands of dollars — or else. Through a stroke of luck, the couple was able to secure the money with family help and made it through Arizona — and then finally to San Jose — after crossing the border by foot.A year and a half later, the loan that saved their lives is still being paid off.Sitting in a conference room at the headquarters of Amigos de Guadalupe Center for Justice and Empowerment, a San Jose-based nonprofit that links migrants to essential services like housing...During holidays, plan on much longer times to get to airport terminals: Roadshow
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 13:38:07 GMT
Q: We picked up our son at San Jose Mineta Airport at 10 p.m. two days before Thanksgiving. We waited in the cellphone lot until our son texted that he was ready for us to pick him up at Terminal B.The turnoff for Terminal B was closed off and all cars were being routed all the way around the long loop past terminal A. What should have taken 10 minutes turned into 45 minutes of terrible traffic.Are they planning to do the same thing before Christmas? Isn’t there any other way to expedite dropoffs and pickups during high airport traffic times?— Lynn McCroryA: Scott Wintner, San Jose airport’s deputy director, responded to your question. He said that what you experienced was the airport’s protocol once traffic backs up at Terminal B, and the end of the loop there becomes impassable, blocking access to Terminal A and exiting to Airport Parkway.If traffic were not rerouted past Terminal A, the backup would block entrances to nearby properties and, eventually, highway o...Man, believed to be Russian, indicted for being a stowaway on a flight from Denmark to California
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 13:38:07 GMT
By Jennifer Henderson | CNNA man has been indicted for being a stowaway on a flight from Copenhagen, Denmark, to LAX on November 4, according to court documents obtained by CNN.Sergey Vladimirovich Ochigava, believed to be a Russian citizen, has been charged with being a “Stowaway on Aircraft.”According the complaint, Ochigava arrived at the Customs and Border Protection (CBP) checkpoint at Los Angeles International Airport and “gave false and misleading information about his travel to the United States, including initially telling CBP that he left his passport on the airplane,” according to the complaint.CBP officers were unable to find Ochigava’s name on the flight manifest for the Scandinavian Airlines (SAS) flight or any other international incoming flight, according to the complaint, which says Ochigava didn’t have a passport or visa to enter the United States.Ochigava pleaded not guilty to the charges at his arraignment in the US District Court Central District of California o...California is on pace to have fewest annual deaths in four years, from all causes
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 13:38:07 GMT
For the first year since COVID-19 upended our lives, the number of deaths from all causes is expected to fall under 300,000 in the Golden State, closer to pre-pandemic normals.The decline is primarily due to fewer COVID deaths — there have been close to 6,000 deaths from the virus so far this year, compared to over 18,000 at this time last year. To date, the virus as killed more than 104,000 Californians.Although the final tally is not yet in, the lower death projections are evidence that with effective vaccines and three years of experience and exposure, COVID has taken its place alongside flu and pneumonia as an endemic disease. But they both can still kill.From 2017 through 2019, about 270,000 people died each year from all causes in the Golden State. In 2020, the first year with COVID in the mix, annual deaths shot up to over 315,000 and grew to nearly 330,000 lives lost in 2021. Last year 310,000 deaths were reported, still 15% higher than pre-pandemic averages.Dr. Bob Wa...Opinion: As a Gaza teen, I used to dream of college
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 13:38:07 GMT
SOUTHERN GAZA — Until two months ago, my life as a 17-year-old in Gaza was marked by the predictable anxieties and aspirations of a student applying to university. I dreamt of crossing borders to pursue a better life — of landing on my feet at an American school and, eventually, of returning to serve my community as a doctor. Education was my blueprint for escaping this city of war.Now as I huddle in a cramped, dimly lit room with 12 other women in Rafah, those dreams seem like fragments of another life. Our stomachs echo with hunger, and our throats burn with thirst. We exist in constant darkness, the world illuminated only by the flashes of missiles and the red glow of destruction.As you read this, I urge you to pause — to hear the shrill sirens and the heart-stopping booms of bombs and feel the tremors that shake our jaws.I have lived in Gaza for 17 years. But amid the ruins, I no longer recognize its streets. Where will I walk now?My family was forced to leave ...Downtown San Jose office tower trades for a big loss as market falters
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 13:38:07 GMT
SAN JOSE — A prominent office tower in downtown San Jose has been bought for much less than the last time the highrise was sold, a deal that underscores the frailty of the Bay Area office market in the wake of the coronavirus.The office building, located at 303 Almaden Boulevard in downtown San Jose, has been bought for slightly under $23.8 million, according to documents filed on Dec. 13 with the Santa Clara County Recorder’s Office.Entry area of an 11-story office tower at 303 Almaden Boulevard near West San Carlos Street in downtown San Jose. (George Avalos/Bay Area News Group)George Mersho, chief executive officer of Morgan Hill-based Shoe Palace, headed up the group that bought the 11-story office tower, county real estate files show.Another company that Mersho heads, Bridge Group Investments, recently began to team up with Los Angeles-based Steerpoint Capital, a real estate firm, on multiple commercial real estate investments. It wasn’t immediately certa...49ers’ Nick Bosa about to encounter new-and-improved Kyler Murray
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 13:38:07 GMT
SANTA CLARA — Nick Bosa is forever linked with Kyler Murray as the 2019 NFL Draft’s top two picks. Both won NFL Rookie of the Year honors on their respective side of the ball, and, both have come back from anterior cruciate ligament tears.Whereas Bosa rebounded in 2021 from his knee injury, Murray is 2-2 in his return this season heading into Sunday’s game between the 49ers (10-3) and host Arizona Cardinals (3-10).“He looks great moving around. He’s actually playing this scheme better than the previous regime there,” Bosa said. “He’s kind of sitting in the pocket and playing quarterback more. Then obviously the run game and the scrambles, he’s an added element there, so we have to be ready.”Under first-year coach Jonathan Gannon, Murray is completing a career-low 60.8-percent of his passes (79-of-130, 864 yards), and he has as many touchdown throws as runs, with three apiece.The 49ers are freshly prepared for Murray’s regained mobility...Details of Bay Area man’s alleged slaying of wife begin to emerge
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 13:38:07 GMT
Suspicions of poisoning, the tainting of food and water, the finding of a victim’s burned body in Fresno County, lurid facts of an autopsy, and a murder suspect’s arrest.Those details in first of a two-day preliminary hearing for a 62-year-old Fairfield man, Gregory Grant Hobson, accused of killing his wife in February, emerged Wednesday in Department 23 of Solano County Superior Court.Judge Barbara A. Zuniga presided over the morning proceeding against Hobson, who has pleaded not guilty to the first-degree murder of Anu Anand Hobson, 53, of Fairfield, on or about Valentine’s Day, Feb. 14.Shortly after 10 a.m., Chief Deputy District Attorney Bruce Flynn called to the stand his first witness, Fairfield Police Office Keli Callison, who testified that, on Feb. 16, after being alerted through a license plate reader dispatch, stopped Hobson in his pickup truck at about 4 p.m. near the intersection of Highway 12 and Walters Road.Callison said reports possibly linking Hobson to a missing p...What to expect during 2024 Lunar New Year festival at Disney California Adventure
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 13:38:07 GMT
The Asian-inspired food festival paying tribute to Chinese, Korean and Vietnamese traditions will return to Disney California Adventure with a lineup of multicultural food booths, live entertainment and Disney characters dressed in festive attire.Disney’s annual Lunar New Year event will be held Jan. 23 through Feb. 18 at the Anaheim theme park.The 2024 festival will celebrate the Year of the Dragon — which means Mushu will lead Mulan’s Lunar New Year parade at DCA.Disney has not yet announced an official lineup of festival marketplace booths, restaurants and menu items for the 2024 festival.The 2023 lineup of six festival marketplace booths included Bamboo Blessings, Wrapped in Love, Lucky 8 Lantern, Red Dragon Spice Traders, Prosperity Bao & Bun and Longevity Noodle Co.DCA restaurants that offered Lunar New Year menu items in 2023 included Paradise Garden Grill, Lamplight Lounge, Lucky Fortune Cookery, Pacific Wharf Cafe (now Aunt Cass Cafe), Sonoma Terrace, Boardwalk Pizza &a...California less likely to have blackouts thanks to solar, big batteries
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 13:38:07 GMT
By Josh Saul and Tope Alake | BloombergCalifornia’s risk of blackouts has fallen as more renewable energy and batteries are added to its power grid, reducing the need to import electricity from other regions, industry regulators said Wednesday.The grid has been designated “elevated risk,” which means it has enough energy for normal conditions but could fall short in extreme weather, the North American Electric Reliability Corp. said in its latest long-term reliability report. That’s actually an improvement over last year’s designation of “high risk,” meaning shortfalls were more likely and additional power sources were needed.Related ArticlesTechnology | Deadly Southern California wildfire triggered by sagging electrical line, Cal Fire report says Technology | PG&E customers face higher bills — yet again — after new company request Technology | Elias: California utility bills to rise for decades after PUC’s solar move...Latest news
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