Community to Meet in Santa Maria to Discuss Renaming Cesar Chavez Drive

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Cesar Chavez Drive
Dave Alley/KEYT

SANTA MARIA, Calif. (KEYT) - A community meeting is scheduled in Santa Maria on Wednesday evening to discuss the potential name change of Cesar Chavez Drive.

Santa Maria is considering the move following recent allegations of sexual abuse that have been made against the famed labor and civil rights activist.

The meeting will be held on Wednesday, May 13, 2026, at 5:30 p.m. at Grogan Park and will offer the community an opportunity to offer input on the potential change.

The City said that community feedback will help inform its decision-making process as staff evaluates options and next steps.

Cesar Chavez Drive is in the northwest portion of Santa Maria near Tommie Kunst Junior High School and was named in 2002 when the housing development where it is located opened.

Santa Maria has notified residents and property owners located on Cesar Chavez Drive with mailed letters to provide information regarding the proposed changes.

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The post Community to Meet in Santa Maria to Discuss Renaming Cesar Chavez Drive appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Locals sue to block prime Miami land from becoming Trump presidential library

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By Steve Contorno, CNN

(CNN) — A handful of South Florida residents filed a lawsuit Wednesday seeking to block the state from handing over a prime piece of Miami’s waterfront to the foundation tasked with building a legacy library for President Donald Trump.

The lawsuit accuses Trump, the foundation, top Florida officials and Miami Dade College of violating the Domestic Emoluments Clause in the US Constitution, which prohibits states from giving a financial benefit to a sitting president.

Gov. Ron DeSantis and other state officials moved last September to donate 2.63 acres of state-owned land in downtown Miami to the Donald J. Trump Presidential Library Foundation, Inc., a nonprofit formed last year in Florida by Trump’s son Eric Trump; his son-in-law Michael Boulos; and James Kiley, a lawyer who has represented the Trump Organization. The land, valued by the local property appraiser at about $63 million, previously belonged to Miami Dade College until the board voted last year to turn it over to the state.

Eric Trump has since announced plans for the site that include a massive tower emblazoned with the Trump name and a lobby that features a 747 Air Force One. President Trump himself has suggested the library would feature a hotel or offices and more closely mirror his other real estate endeavors than the museums built by his predecessors.

“I don’t believe in building libraries or museums,” Trump told reporters last year. He also said the land sits on the “best block in Miami.”

In their lawsuit, the plaintiffs said these statements “make clear that President Trump intends to monetize this skyscraper, generating significant profit for himself and his family.” The lawsuit also claims that the land is likely worth hundreds of millions of dollars given other recent property sales nearby and could double Miami Dade College’s endowment if sold on the open market.

“These funds could have been used to advance the college’s research needs, offer more bachelor’s degree programs, secure more world-class facilities and faculty, or reduce student expenses,” it said.

The lawsuit was filed jointly Wednesday in the US District Court for the Southern District of Florida by the Constitutional Accountability Center, a liberal Washington DC think tank, and the Florida law firm Gelber Schachter & Greenberg.

The plaintiffs in the lawsuit include a Miami Dade College student; a nonprofit owned by local activist Marvin Dunn that hoped to operate on the land; and two Miami residents who say the proposed Trump skyscraper would block their sightlines.

CNN has requested comment from the White House, the library foundation, Miami Dade College and the state of Florida.

Efforts by Florida officials to quickly find a home in the Sunshine State for Trump’s post-presidency project started soon after he returned to the White House.

A bill passed by the Republican-controlled state legislature and signed into law by DeSantis last year barred local governments from regulating presidential libraries in anticipation that Trump would move to build one in his adopted home state.

Later that fall, the Miami Dade College board conducted a meeting to discuss “potential real estate transactions.” No other details about the transaction were included in the public notice and the agenda stated only that the board would discuss conveying property to the state. A presidential library was not mentioned.

Shortly after the vote, DeSantis announced that the Cabinet would vote a week later to give the land from Miami Dade College to the Trump foundation. Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier also posted a pre-recorded and edited vid

Local Businesses Jump Ahead of State Street Master Plan with New Remodels

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SANTA BARBARA, CALIF. (KEYT) - The recently released drawings of State Street that could be the guideline for the new master plan for downtown Santa Barbara is just one check on the long road to redesign.

It is said to be the centerpiece for the downtown economy and it has been struggling for several years.

To some analysts, it started a few years before the pandemic, due to some shifts in the buying habits of shoppers online.

Now there is a move for some investors and business owners to go forward even without a city plan. They see an opportunity and believe it will work.

The list is a cross section of retail, restaurants and the arts.

The Music Academy of the West has plans to begin remodeling its new site at 901 State St. later this year and begin to make a performance and teaching center out of the former retail and banking location.

Across the street, the Santa Barbara International Film Festival McHurley Film Center has opened with five screens and is about to reveal its new marquee.

Next door, the Game Seeker, which opened last year in a new site, has used its interior for more games and also tables for customers to try some out.

Sandbar closed last year and has remodeled the interior. It will be open in June and plans to capture local residents and hungry tourists where it is located in the gateway section to downtown.

At the Amazon building on Carrillo and State, the food plan near the front door will now include Silvergreens, Handlebar Coffee and Renaud's Patisserie & Bistro.

The closed Chase Restaurant, recovering from a fire has now reopened with inside and outside seating at the classic location in the 1000 block.

Pascuchi is still open with its Italian food while it is rebranding in the next couple of months and redecorates in the 1200 block.

The Blue Owl on Canon Perdido St. says even though it had to remove its outside parklet due to new city rules, it is getting a new one designed and approved by the review agencies to go in as soon as possible. That will add about 25 more seats to the small restaurant which also has entertainment at night.

The former Starbucks on the corner of State and Victoria has had a for lease sign up, and now it is down, but the new tenant has not been announced.

The Antique Alley is showing a for sale sign on its building at State and Ortega St.

Across the street, Noozhawk reports the closed Macy's department store building is now being considered by Yardi Systems of Goleta as a new location. It is part of a moving planning process for the city to work with the owners on filling that vacant space and also the Nordstroms empty building on the Canon Perdido St. at Carrillo side of the Paseo Nuevo Mall, which may become housing units.

(More details, photos and video will be added here later today.)

The Latest Breaking News,

CNN verifica: Trump afirma falsamente que la tasa de inflación era de solo el 1,7 % antes de la guerra con Irán

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Por Daniel Dale, CNN

Después de que las cifras recién publicadas del Índice de Precios al Consumidor mostraron que la tasa de inflación interanual fue del 3,8 % en abril —la más alta en casi tres años—, el presidente Donald Trump intentó tranquilizar a los estadounidenses respecto al aumento de los precios. Lo hizo al afirmar falsamente que la tasa de inflación era de solo el 1,7 % antes de la guerra con Irán.

“Si nos remontamos a justo antes de la guerra, durante los últimos tres meses, la inflación se situaba en el 1,7 %”, dijo Trump el martes. Más tarde, en sus declaraciones a los periodistas, afirmó que “si tomamos como referencia el periodo anterior —justo antes de la guerra—, estuvimos, durante los últimos tres meses, en el 1,7 %; y ahora, lo que tenemos es que, tan pronto como termine esta guerra, verán que la inflación descenderá probablemente al 1,5 %”.

En realidad, la tasa de inflación no fue del 1,7 % en ninguno de los tres meses anteriores a la guerra.

El aumento interanual del Índice de Precios al Consumidor fue del 2,7 % en noviembre de 2025, del 2,7 % en diciembre de 2025 y del 2,4 % en enero de 2026. La tasa volvió a situarse en el 2,4 % en febrero de 2026, mes para el cual se recopiló casi la totalidad de los datos antes del inicio de la guerra, que estalló el último día de ese mes. La tasa no ha sido tan baja como el 1,7 % desde principios de 2021, en plena pandemia de covid-19.

El indicador de inflación preferido por la Reserva Federal —el índice de precios de Gastos de Consumo Personal— tampoco se situó en el 1,7 % en ninguno de esos meses previos a la guerra. Fue del 2,8 % en noviembre de 2025, del 2,9 % tanto en diciembre de 2025 como en enero de 2026, y del 2,8 % en febrero de 2026. Dio un salto al 3,5 % en marzo de 2026; los datos de abril de 2026 aún no se han publicado.

Trump ha hablado a menudo de la inflación subyacente —la cual excluye los volátiles precios de los alimentos y la energía— en lugar de la inflación general. Sin embargo, no lo hizo en esta ocasión y, en cualquier caso, la inflación subyacente se situó en al menos un 2,5 % en el Índice de Precios al Consumidor y en un 2,8 % en el índice de Gastos de Consumo Personal durante cada uno de los meses comprendidos entre noviembre de 2025 y febrero de 2026.

Al ser consultado el martes sobre la afirmación de Trump respecto al “1,7 %”, el portavoz de la Casa Blanca, Kush Desai, respondió con una táctica que se ha vuelto habitual en el equipo de Trump: ignorar la pregunta específica sobre la cifra inexacta, pero declarar, aun así, que Trump tiene “razón”.

“El presidente Trump tiene razón: la inflación se mantuvo moderada y estable antes de la Operación Furia Épica”, declaró Desai. “El presidente siempre ha sido claro respecto a las interrupciones temporales resultantes de la Operación Epic Fury, así como sobre la rapidez con la que caerán los precios de la energía y la inflación una vez que se neutralice la amenaza nuclear iraní y se reabra plenamente el estrecho de Ormuz”.

Tras defender la guerra con Irán, Trump también afirmó el martes: “Ahora, con todo esto, la inflación es mucho más baja de lo que era bajo el mandato de Biden. Biden tuvo la inflación más alta en la historia de nuestro país. La inflación actual no es nada en comparación”.

Sin embargo, Trump se equivocaba al afirmar que Biden registró la inflación más alta en la historia de Estados Unidos, tal como CNN y otros medios han señalado reiteradamente cada vez que Trump ha hecho esta afirmación en el pasado. El pico de inflación bajo el Gobierno de Biden —un 9,1 % en junio de 2022— fue el más alto en más de 40 años (desde noviembre de 1981); sin embargo, distó mucho del máximo histórico del

On the road to Tehran, Iranians on edge as threat of resumption of war looms

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By Chief Global Affairs Correspondent Matthew Chance, CNN

Near Tabriz (CNN) — Flanked by glistening, snow-capped peaks, the long road to Tehran winds through picturesque valleys of Tabrizi poplar trees and fields with green shoots of wheat.

We trace the narrow Qotur river, brown and swollen from the spring thaw, as it surges past shepherds grazing their shaggy flocks on the slopes.

In the distance, an impressive railway bridge, its steel girders painted bright white, stretches across the shimmering landscape, apparently untouched by the US and Israeli strikes that battered and scarred parts of Iran earlier this year.

But amid stalled peace negotiations and growing tensions over the continued closure of the strategic Strait of Hormuz, fears that the war could flare again are fueling a sense of disquiet in the country. On CNN’s trip across the country, ordinary Iranians — whom Trump once exhorted to “take back your country” — described life under bombardment and blockade.

“Don’t go to there, it’s far too dangerous now,” one young Iranian woman traveling from the United States to Tehran advised when she learned of our shared journey through northwestern Iran

“I have family there, that is why I am taking the risk,” she explained, asking not to be identified.

On the roadside, between kiosks selling pistachio nuts and tea, black billboards mourn the death of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the Iranian supreme leader killed in a February airstrike on the first day of the war.

“His shadow has passed over our heads,” reads one banner in Farsi, quoting a popular Persian lament.

His son and successor Mojtaba Khamenei is now the “standard bearer” of the nation, declares another poster, although the younger Khamenei, who was reportedly injured in the same strike, has not been seen or heard in public since assuming power – another sign of how uncertain Iran remains.

“Trump could decide to start the bombing again today,” one Iranian man said.

“Maybe not when he is in China, but who knows. Trump likes to be at the center of attention,” he added.

As US President Donald Trump embarks on that state visit to China, both the United States and Iran seem to be looking to Beijing for a possible way out of their deadlock. Trump is expected to call on China to pressure Iran toward compromise. Iran’s ambassador to China has also suggested the communist state could play a powerful mediator role between Washington and Tehran.

The US and China share an interest in unblocking the flow of oil and gas through the Persian Gulf. Furthermore, it may be a shrewd diplomatic move for China to appear to be helping to fix the problems created for the global economy in recent months, potentially allowing Beijing to contrast its behavior with Washington’s disruption.

But it is Iranians — a vibrant political force even with the country’s hardline rule – who are likely to decide the future of their country and, on a long drive to the capital there were snapshots of the disparate forces at play.

We saw crowds of day-trippers – young and old – hauling gallon-drums of cooking oil by hand across the border from Turkey. One breathless Iranian pensioner explained how the essential product is now six times more expensive in Iran than in Turkey, amid a spiraling cost-of-living crisis that shows no sign of easing.

Though likely exacerbated by the recent US naval blockade of Iran, cost of living issues underpinned nationwide anti-government protests that began late last year – leading to a ruthless crackdown. Thousands were killed in the state’s response to demonstrations, Iranian authorities have admitted.

At a restaurant en route to Tehran, in an ancient caravanserai, or traditional trave

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