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DECEMBER 25-31, 2020 Serving San Diego Since 1987 • 14 Pages
T h e F i l i p i n o –A m e r i c a n C o m m u n i t y N e w s pa p e r
Also published in LOS ANGELES • ORANGE COUNTY/INLAND EMPIRE • NORTHERN CALIFORNIA • NEW YORK/NEW JERSEY • LAS VEGAS
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DATELINE PH Consulate in LA closed until Jan. 2021 due to at least 1 COVID case among staff FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA
THE Philippine Consulate General in Los Angeles will temporarily shut down operations for the rest of the year following at least one confirmed COVID-19 case among its personnel. The Consulate General will shut down operations until January 3, 2021, it said in a public notice on Saturday, December 21. This update comes after the Consulate previously announced it would shut down until Dec. 21 after a “highly probable exposure to COVID-19” from a client last week. “All clients who have availed of our services for the month of Dec. are strongly
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US Congress passes $900 billion COVID-19 relief bill by Klarize
Medenilla AJPress
FOLLOWING months of inaction, the United States Congress on late Monday, Dec. 22, passed the long-awaited stimulus package that includes $600 in direct payments to millions of American taxpayers as well as a flurry of
other funding measures that are unrelated to the COVID-19 economic crisis. The 5,593-page spending bill’s eleventh-hour passing this week arrived after months of partisan arguments and speculation over whether or not ranking members of Congress would compromise on a bill that could provide aid to individuals and businesses grappling with the financial burden of
the ongoing pandemic. The $900 billion stimulus bill is roughly half the size of the $2.2 trillion Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act passed in March that provided, among other things, an unprecedented $1,200 in direct payments to millions of taxpayers.
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US approves Moderna vaccine by Ritchel
Mendiola AJPress
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Nuezca was seen on video shooting two people in the head over an argument. Screen grab from Facebook account of Ronjie Daquigan, a councilor from Gerona, Tarlac
PNP CHIEF IN TARLAC. Philippine National Police (PNP) chief Police General Debold Sinas visits the wake of Frank and Sonya Gregorio on Tuesday, December 22. The two were shot dead by Police Senior Master Sergeant Jonel Nuezca in Tarlac. Following the crime, some lawmakers have come out to voice out their support—renewing their push for the others—to reimpose the death penalty in the Philippines. PNP photo
THE United States has authorized a second vaccine against the coronavirus for emergency use, with shipments starting to arrive this week. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on Friday, December 18, granted an emergency use authorization (EUA) to Moderna Inc’s COVID-19 vaccine a day after the agency’s advisory panel endorsed it as safe and effective. “With the availability of two vaccines now for the prevention of COVID-19, the FDA has taken another crucial step in the fight against this global pandemic that is causing vast numbers of hospitalizations and deaths in the United States each day,” FDA Commissioner Stephen M. Hahn, M.D. said in a statement. Moderna’s vaccine has a 94.5% efficacy rate, occurring at least 14 days after the second dose. It is authorized to be distributed in the U.S. for use in individuals 18 years of age and older, fol-
Duterte on Tarlac shooter: Lock him up Stay-at-home order ‘very likely’ to be
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extended for certain California regions
by Ritchel
Mendiola AJPress
PHILIPPINE President Rodrigo Duterte has condemned the police officer who shot a mother and son dead in Paniqui, Tarlac. In a taped speech, Duterte said Police Senior M/Sgt. Jonel Nuezca should be locked up for shooting and killing Sonya Gregorio, 52, and her son Frank Anthony, 25, after an altercation on Sunday, December 20. “Ang pagmamahal ko sa trabaho lang natin (My love is for the work we do). You do something which is not — out of the ordinary just pulling a gun and shooting people, you must be… Eh ikulong ninyo ‘yon. Huwag ninyong
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IATF allows foreigners to re-enter PH
THE Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) has approved the re-entry of foreigners who left the Philippines on December 17 and onwards, Malacañang announced Friday, December 18. “The IATF, in its 89th meeting, also allowed the re-entry to the Philippines of foreign nationals with valid and existing visas under Section 9(e) and 9(g) of Commonwealth Act No. 613, as amended, who are already in the country and will be leaving
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GOING into the holiday week, California is still hitting record COVID-19 numbers, signaling that restrictions could remain in place into the new year. Governor Gavin Newsom on Monday, December 21 said that the state is inclined to extend the regional stay-at-home order for more than the three-week period. But he did not offer what that extension would look like.
“Based upon all the data, and based upon all these trend lines, it’s very likely that we will extend the stay-at-home order,” Newsom, who is quarantining after another staff member tested positive for COVID-19, said. This comes as four out the five regions, or 98% of the state, are under the order, which was triggered by the Intensive Care
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Leticia “Letty” Lopez-Viado (left) is sworn-in as mayor of West Covina, California by Judge Lucy Armendariz of the Los Angeles Superior Court during a ceremony at the West Covina council chambers on Tuesday night, December 15. She was joined by her husband Garry Viado and their two children Victoria and Garrett. Photo by George Ogden
Supreme Court rejects Trump challenge excluding undocumented Letty Lopez-Viado ascends to immigrants from Census by AJPress THE U.S. Supreme Court has dismissed a lawsuit challenging the Trump administration’s plan to exclude undocumented immigrants from the calculations used to allocate seats in the House of Representatives. “At present, this case is riddled with contingencies and speculation that impede judicial review,” the court said in an unsigned 7-page opinion. The Supreme Court added that the challenge from New York state was premature. “Consistent with our determination that standing has not been shown and that the case is not ripe, we express no view on the merits of the constitutional and related statutory claims presented. We hold only
that they are not suitable for adjudication at this time,” the court continued. In a 6 to 3 vote, the three liberal justices who dissented said that the effort to exclude people in the country from the population for the apportionment of House seats is unlawful. “The government has announced a policy to exclude aliens without lawful status from the apportionment base for the decennial census,” wrote Justice Stephen Breyer. “The government does not deny that, if carried out, the policy will harm the plaintiffs.” According to USA Today, the quick decision in a case argued Nov. 30 signaled the court’s hope that it can avoid a more consequential ruling on an issue that could affect the balance of political power in Con-
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West Covina, CA mayorship, becoming first Filipina-Mexican American in top role by Christina
M. Oriel
AJPress
WEST Covina, long considered home to one of the largest Filipino American concentrations in Southern California, now has its first Filipina-Mexican American mayor. Leticia “Letty” Lopez-Viado, who previously served as mayor pro tem, will lead the San Gabriel Valley city in the top
post for the next year. The incoming mayor was sworn into office by Judge Lucy Armendariz of the Los Angeles Superior Court, with her husband Garry Viado and their two children Victoria and Garrett at her side, during a ceremony at the West Covina council chambers on Tuesday night, December 15. “I feel extremely honored
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