San Diego-based International Relief Teams responds to Hurricane Melissa in Jamaica

Thousands of San Diegans receive emergency food assistance at Snapdragon Stadium amid federal shutdown

San Diego FC to face Portland in MLS playoff game Sunday

Navy police officer charged with murder in death of LMPD officer pleads not guilty; bail set at $1M

Vegetables sprout in new $1.67 billion County Crop Report

Grossmont Healthcare District Board to consider James Sly as CEO at upcoming meeting

Trump administration draws criticism and lawsuit over tearing down entire East Wing of White House

Charges filed against driver who killed cousins in Lemon Grove

Save a life, honor a Legend at Bill Walton Memorial Blood Drive on Nov. 5

Spring Valley woman sentenced for animal cruelty

California commits $80M boost to food banks as hardship rises

Help shape the County’s Emergency Operations plan through an online survey

News

Budget Crisis Hits Home

State workers in East County struggle to cope with prospect of huge pay cuts, lay-offs; Judge orders Sept. 12 hearing on Governor’s wage-slashing orders

By Miriam Raftery
Photos by Aida Canonizado

Mildred
Scarber, a state employee who works at the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV)
in El Cajon, was shocked to learn that Governor Schwarzenegger has ordered
all state employees’ pay rates slashed to the federal minimum wage: just
$6.55 an hour.

“This drops my pay by two-thirds,” said Scarber, a salaried employee
who has worked at the DMV for eleven years. “Previously our pay roughly
came to $18 an hour.”  In addition, the Governor has eliminated
all overtime – so Scarber also loses the $100 to $300 a month she typically
earned helping staff the ever-busy DMV office. 


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Presidential Candidates Address La Raza in San Diego

By E. A. Barrera

NCLR photos
Photo by E.A. Barrera/Photo courtesy of NCLR

Obama Talks Health, Education, and Announces Plan to
Help Small Business

 

McCain Emphasizes Tax Issues, Trade with Latin America


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Support community news in the public interest! As nonprofit news, we rely on donations from the public to fund our reporting -- not special interests. Please donate to sustain East County Magazine's local reporting and/or wildfire alerts at https://www.eastcountymedia.org/donate to help us keep people safe and informed across our region.

Still No County Fire Department Five Years After Cedar Blaze

 

Still No County Fire Department Five Years After Cedar Blaze



By E.A. Barrera

"Given the existing high-risk conditions that are projected to continue into the future, destructive firestorms will certainly occur again. Yet, even armed with this knowledge and after the Cedar Fire wake-up call, the San Diego region is woefully unprepared."

-- San Diego County Grand Jury, May 29, 2008

October will mark the first anniversary of the Witch Creek Fires and fifth anniversary of the deadlier Cedar Fire.  Four years have passed since voters overwhelmingly approved Proposition "C" which called for a Countywide Fire Department.  Yet  the County of San Diego is still at the nascent stage of organizing collective fire departments of the region into one unified command structure.


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