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<p> “I saw how the hill was sliding down, the authorities came in yesterday to take us out of our homes, they told us the hill was collapsing. At 5 am Monday my house collapsed completely” said 54 year old Juan Sandoval just one of the dozen homeowners who lost their homes this week in Tijuana after a hill collapsed underneath their homes at Fraccionamiento Monterrey.</p>
<p> According to Sandoval, they noticed the earth moving about two weeks ago.</p>
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<p> “Se veía que se estaba venciendo el cerro; ayer llegó protección civil para desalojarnos de nuestras casas porque estaban a punto de caerse. Hoy, a las 5:00 am mi casa se hundió totalmente” narró Juan Sandoval de 54 años de edad, uno de los afectados cuya casa, ubicada en el fraccionamiento Monterrey en Tijuana se derrumbó en la madrugada del lunes.</p>
<p> Según Sandoval, llevaban por lo menos 15 días con avisos y movimientos de tierra.</p>
<p>New America Media<strong></strong></p>
<p> If you’ve turned on the television recently, you’ve probably seen an ad for Proposition 16, the initiative put on the ballot by Pacific Gas and Electric, which would make it more difficult for local governments to get into the power businesses.</p>
<p> To date, PG&E has spent $25 million on the campaign and has pledged $10 million more before the June 8 election.</p>
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<p> Linda Greenhouse in the (April 26, 2010), wrote “I’m glad I’ve already seen the Grand Canyon. Because I’m not going back to Arizona as long as it remains a police state, which is what the appalling anti-immigrant bill that Gov. Jan Brewer signed into law last week has turned it into.” Greenhouse was referring to a state law that requires the police to demand proof of legal residency from any person about whom they have “reasonable suspicion” that “the person is an alien who is unlawfully present in the United States.”</p>