Santa Barbara County News and Events

Jefe de la FDA deja el cargo después de que Trump aprobara destituirlo

Kraig Pakulski 0 18 Article rating: No rating

Por Kaitlan Collins, Ben Tinker, Adam Cancryn y Sarah Owermohle, CNN

El comisionado de la Administración de Alimentos y Medicamentos de EE.UU. (FDA, por sus siglas en inglés), Marty Makary, dejará el Gobierno de Trump, según tres personas familiarizadas con la situación, después de que el presidente Donald Trump aprobara la semana pasada un plan para destituirlo.

El jefe de la FDA había enfrentado una presión intensa y sostenida tanto dentro del Gobierno como fuera de él, incluso por su resistencia a aprobar la venta de cigarrillos electrónicos con sabores, un episodio que llevó a Trump a confrontarlo directamente. También enfrentó presión de aliados externos, incluidos sectores de la industria farmacéutica y grupos contra el aborto. Además, supervisó una constante rotación en los altos cargos de la agencia.

La salida de Makary significa que Trump ahora deberá cubrir otra vacante más en los niveles más altos del Departamento de Salud y Servicios Humanos de EE.UU. El Gobierno ya carece de un director permanente al frente de los Centros para el Control y la Prevención de Enfermedades y de un director general de Sanidad permanente, quien tradicionalmente actúa como el principal médico del país.

La salida de Makary ocurre un día antes de que estuviera previsto que testificara sobre el presupuesto propuesto para la FDA ante la Comisión de Asignaciones Presupuestarias del Senado.

Politico informó primero sobre su renuncia.

El impulso para destituir a Makary se aceleró en los últimos días, impulsado por una facción de funcionarios de la Casa Blanca y del Departamento de Salud y Servicios Humanos que se había desencantado con una FDA marcada por el caos constante, choques internos y confusión en sus políticas, según personas familiarizadas con el tema.

Durante la última semana, Makary intentó reforzar su posición ante Trump y en algunos momentos dijo a sus allegados que creía que el presidente aún mantenía su confianza en él.

Por eso, Makary y sus aliados quedaron sorprendidos cuando el viernes surgieron varios informes que señalaban que Trump había aprobado un plan para despedirlo. Eso provocó amplias especulaciones dentro del Gobierno sobre quién estaba detrás del impulso para sacarlo del cargo, así como sobre cuándo y si Trump haría oficial su destitución.

A pesar del amplio descontento con el desempeño de Makary, algunos asesores de Trump argumentaban que destituir a otro alto funcionario de salud equivaldría a un error político, lo que enfurecería aún más a parte de la base “Make America Healthy Again” del Gobierno. También generaría otra vacante de alto nivel, obligando al Senado a dedicar un valioso tiempo de sesión para confirmar a un reemplazo antes de las elecciones intermedias.

Sin embargo, otros dentro de la Casa Blanca y del Departamento de Salud y Servicios Humanos consideraban inevitable la salida de Makary. Además, veían con buenos ojos la oportunidad de reorganizar el liderazgo de la FDA y fortalecer las relaciones con sectores clave del movimiento contra el aborto y de la industria farmacéutica antes de noviembre.

Además de la destitución prevista de Makary, funcionarios de la Casa Blanca y del Departamento de Salud y Servicios Humanos también evaluaban una reestructuración del personal directivo de la agencia.

Makary, cirujano y autor, había prometido acelerar las decisiones de la FDA sobre medicamentos, dispositivos y vacunas tras su confirmación en marzo de 2025. Pero durante el año siguiente quedó frecuentemente envuelto en controversias, tanto por compañías farmacéuticas descontentas con su manejo del proceso de aprobación de medicamentos como por funcionarios del Gobierno que cuestionaban su gestión en otras áreas del amplio alcance regulatorio de la FDA, incluida la regulación del tabaco.

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WINGS Infant Care Center Opens In Santa Maria

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SANTA MARIA, Calif. (KEYT) - Santa Maria has a new childcare resource for infants from six weeks to two years old.

This will allow a lot of parents to return to work much sooner after having a baby.

Children’s Resource & Referral of Santa Barbara County (CRR) is hosting a ribbon‑cutting ceremony to celebrate the opening of its new WINGS Infant Center in Santa Maria. 

The event takes place from 3:30–4:30, and members of CRR will be joined by those of the Santa Maria Valley Chamber of Commerce to cut the ribbon punctually at 4:00 p.m.

The WINGS Infant Center expands access to high‑quality, inclusive infant care for children ages six weeks to two years, particularly serving working families, low‑income households, and those involved in foster care.

The facility emphasizes inclusion, relationship‑based care, and whole‑child development.

Attendees will be able to tour the center, connect with community partners, and learn more about CRR’s mission to strengthen early childhood systems across Santa Barbara County.

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The post WINGS Infant Care Center Opens In Santa Maria appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Santa Barbara Police to Step Up Seat Belt Enforcement May 18–31 as part of “Click It or Ticket” Campaign

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The Santa Barbara Police Department will deploy extra patrols May 18–31 to look for drivers and passengers not wearing seat belts, including vehicles where children are not secured in appropriate […]

The post Santa Barbara Police to Step Up Seat Belt Enforcement May 18–31 as part of “Click It or Ticket” Campaign appeared first on edhat.

Trump wants to rebrand ICE as NICE. Not everyone agrees

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ICE agents depart the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building on February 4

By Michael Williams, Priscilla Alvarez, CNN

(CNN) — President Donald Trump has made clear on social media and in interviews that he thinks Immigration and Customs Enforcement needs a rebrand — more specifically, a new name: National Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or NICE.

Whether that change will move forward, in the form of an executive order, or whether it will just be a meme, has been the topic of internal debate at the White House and the Department of Homeland Security.

The idea to change the name of ICE — which would require an act of Congress, not simply an executive order — appears to have originated on social media. In late April, the president shared to his Truth Social account a screenshot of a suggestion made on X that the name be changed “so the media has to say NICE agents all day.”

“GREAT IDEA!!! DO IT,” the president wrote on Truth Social.

Since then, both the White House and the Department of Homeland Security, the Cabinet agency that oversees ICE, have shared memes to their social media accounts endorsing the name change. As the memes took off, officials at ICE remained on standby in case the White House chose to move forward with a name change and crunched numbers on what that would look like, from changing stationary to vests, per a source familiar.

Trump said he’s felt pushback from rank-and-file officers, along with the White House’s border czar, Tom Homan, who were not as enthusiastic.

“But I’m not sure that the guys liked it, because … I think they like their image of being strong, and they’ve done a great job,” he said during a Tuesday interview on WABC’s “Sid and Friends in the Morning.”

A spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security said in a statement that “the NICE men and women of ICE continue to risk their lives to arrest and remove criminal illegal aliens from American communities.”

ICE has been perhaps the most heavily and publicly scrutinized federal agency in Trump’s second term, as its agents have deployed nationwide to conduct at-times controversial immigration arrests.

Following the shooting of US citizen Renee Good by an ICE officer in Minneapolis in January, public opinion polling found that slightly more than half of Americans believed the agency was making US cities less safe.

Aware of that criticism, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin has frequently said he wants to take a “quiet” approach to immigration enforcement while maintaining an aggressive posture.

“We’re staying focused on all illegals, without question,” Mullin, who took over DHS in March, told Newsmax last week. “We’re purposefully trying to be a little more quiet. … That doesn’t mean we’re slowing down even a little bit.”

ICE was created by the Homeland Security Act of 2002, the post-9/11 law enacted by Congress that also created the Department of Homeland Security. Because the agency was created by Congress, changing its name would require congressional action.

But such technicalities have not prevented the administration from acting outside of its authority to change agencies’ names in the past.

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