Updated on May 4, 2021 at 5:23 pm
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A decades-old fire station has found new life in the fight against COVID-19.
Chula Vista’s old Fire Station No. 5 was slated to be demolished after the city dedicated a new station in April. However, a partnership between the city, San Diego County, state of California and San Ysidro Health has given the building, now a Monoclonal Antibody Infusion Center, a new lease on life.
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“It’s a treatment that really reduces the rate of time that you’re ill,” Chula Vista mayor Mary Casillas Salas said on Tuesday.
Chula Vista Police release new information in the case of missing mother, Maya Millete
In the update, the department details some specific actions they have followed up on in the case as it nears four months since she was last seen. Author: CBS News 8 Team Published: 11:36 AM PDT May 5, 2021 Updated: 11:36 AM PDT May 5, 2021
CHULA VISTA, Calif. On Tuesday, Chula Vista Police released their bi-weekly update on the search for missing mother, Maya Millete.
The department assured the community that law enforcement officers working the case remain as dedicated now as they were on the first day of the missing person report.
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Chula Vista ljast week opened a new, state-of-the-art fire station on Moss Street, the second to open within a month.
Fire Station No. 3, located at 100 Moss Street near Naples Street, replaces the 60-year-old facility that was formerly Station No. 9.
“Relocating this station will help meet the goal of arriving at calls in seven minutes, 90 percent of the time,” city officials said in a news release.
Much like the new Station No. 5 on Orange Avenue, the 13,000-square-foot building features fast roll-up doors for quick responses, the ability to house modern fire equipment, four drive-thru bays and 10 bunk rooms. All personnel on duty have a cellphone that generates an alert tone, call information and mapping. Time is saved by a computer-generated voice message alerting crews to the incoming call while dispatchers are still gathering information from the caller, officials said.
Chula Vista City Council approves police use of license plate readers
Immigration activists called for an end to the controversial police tool for fear it would lead to more deportations. Author: Abbie Alford (Reporter) Updated: 11:41 PM PDT April 20, 2021
CHULA VISTA, Calif. The Chula Vista Council held its first in person-meeting in over a year Tuesday night and the Chula Vista Police Department’s Automated License Plate Recognition (ALPR) was up for a heated discussion.
Immigration activists have been calling on CVPD to stop the use of the police tool for fear the data is being shared with Immigration Customs Enforcement.
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