Category: Health

‘A street is not a home’ nor a toilet

 Anna Daniels  April 6, 2009  8 Comments on ‘A street is not a home’ nor a toilet

by Anna Daniels

One day last week I read that the City was disbanding its winter shelters, which not only provided protection from the elements but also linked people up with services they needed- health care, jobs, and housing. These shelters “housed” a very small percentage of the total homeless population but their importance shouldn’t be dismissed.

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San Diego’s Tent City: Everynight in front of the downtown library

 Frank Gormlie  April 3, 2009  18 Comments on San Diego’s Tent City: Everynight in front of the downtown library

Patty Mooney informed me that every night in front of San Diego’s downtown main library, a tent city pops up – right in front of the doors, and also across the street, in front of the Post Office.

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The Invisible Ones: Homeless Combat Veterans

 Source  April 3, 2009  7 Comments on The Invisible Ones: Homeless Combat Veterans

by Patty Mooney

How many times have you passed up a sleeping figure underneath a blanket or tarp on the darkened streets of your city? Have you ever considered that this could be one of our war heroes?

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California’s Tent Cities Grow

 Source  April 2, 2009  3 Comments on California’s Tent Cities Grow

FRESNO, Calif. – As the operations manager of an outreach center for the homeless here, Paul Stack is used to seeing people down on their luck. What he had never seen before was people living in tents and lean-tos on the railroad lot across from the center.

“They just popped up about 18 months ago,” Mr. Stack said. “One day it was empty. The next day, there were people living there.”

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End of my first year in OB – ‘Thank you Ocean Beach’

 Lane Tobias  April 1, 2009  17 Comments on End of my first year in OB – ‘Thank you Ocean Beach’

by Lane Tobias

One year in OB, and I couldn’t be happier

Today, April 1st, marks the one year anniversary of my girlfriend and I moving to San Diego. It really has gone fast, and I have to say that it has been a year of learning and self realization – I owe most of it to the beauty of living in a community as tight knit and open-minded as Ocean Beach.

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Robb Field Skateboard Park: No helmets and no supervisors

 Source  March 30, 2009  5 Comments on Robb Field Skateboard Park: No helmets and no supervisors

When the city eliminated supervision at skate parks this year to save money, the parks filled with gleeful skaters who no longer had to pay $5 and be under the watchful eye of a supervisor.

Problems followed. The skate park at Robb Field at Ocean Beach was repeatedly tagged with graffiti, forcing city employees to make regular trips to clean it up. Reports surfaced of people drinking and smoking at the skate parks. Parks employees and police officers started checking in on the parks regularly.

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San Diego-area CVS Drugstores Selling Expired Products and Locking up Condoms

 Frank Gormlie  March 26, 2009  4 Comments on San Diego-area CVS Drugstores Selling Expired Products and Locking up Condoms

Community activists and faith leaders gathered outside a local CVS pharmacy yesterday to warn consumers about expired products found on the shelves at CVS. The community leaders were reacting to the results of a survey, announced today, that found 77 percent of Greater San Diego CVS stores surveyed had expired goods for sale and that CVS stores operating in communities with higher concentrations of residents of color are more likely to lock condoms, creating a deterrent in communities most at risk of HIV/AIDS.

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The County of San Diego Is So Huge – where do we start? the money or the scandals?

 Frank Gormlie  March 4, 2009  6 Comments on The County of San Diego Is So Huge – where do we start? the money or the scandals?

In my first post of this series on San Diego County government, I gave an overview of the County itself and then a brief look at the governmental machine. Because of the sheer size and magnitude of its operations and reach, it can be very overwhelming any time one looks at our County political apparatus. Because our county is huge, the government shell over it has to be huge too. And we’ve got to understand this shell.

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Furry Freak Brother found in Nebraska – dude put anxious cat in large bong to calm it down

 Source  March 4, 2009  8 Comments on Furry Freak Brother found in Nebraska – dude put anxious cat in large bong to calm it down

You old hippies from the sixties and seventies remember the Furry Freak Brothers, right? And the crazy things they used to do with their cat, Freddy. Well, one of the brothers is alive and well in the body of a 20-year old dude, Acea Schomaker of Lincoln, Nebraska. Schomaker – in order to calm down an abused cat that he and his girlfriend took in – placed the 6-month old feline into a large, make-shift bong.

Schomaker said that when he smoked marijuana through it, it calmed the cat down.

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Cancer cluster at UCSD

 Source  February 23, 2009  0 Comments on Cancer cluster at UCSD

A higher-than-normal rate of cancer diagnoses in the building that houses UCSD’s literature department has been the subject of near-constant discussion in recent months, but it’s an issue that’s been on the department’s radar for years.

“We’ve been talking about this in the hallways for almost as long as I’ve been here,” said Anna Joy Springer, a creative-writing professor who’s been teaching at UCSD for six years.

Between 2000 and 2006, faculty and staff who work in the building reported at least eight individual cases of breast cancer. Of these people, two have died.

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Urgent Action: Needy Families Will Suffer Significant Consequences

 Lane Tobias  February 19, 2009  1 Comment on Urgent Action: Needy Families Will Suffer Significant Consequences

Through my work alongside social service and mental health professionals, I am occasionally presented the opportunity to do more than provide direct services. Today I came across a call to action for all San Diego community leaders, and in my opinion that includes anyone who takes part in the OB Rag – either as a contributor, a reader, or both.

As a result of the slumping economy and the California Legislature’s longstanding inability to agree on a viable budget, there will be a number of far-reaching consequences. One of those consequences is in direct relation to the well-being of San Diego’s poor, namely those receiving cash aid or food stamps.

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Food Stamps in San Diego County – a Disgrace! – Here’s how to get them:

 Lane Tobias  February 18, 2009  39 Comments on Food Stamps in San Diego County – a Disgrace! – Here’s how to get them:

At a time when jobless rates are hovering around 8%, one in ten homeowners can’t afford their mortgage payments, and the average cost of staple foods have risen astronomically, we should all be proud to know that those of us living in San Diego County reside in a region with the lowest accessibility to food stamps in the ENTIRE COUNTRY.

According to the Food Research and Action Center, only 29% of eligible recipients receive Food Stamp benefits, good for last among the 24 largest metropolitan areas in the country.

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