Daily Business Report: April 15 2026
MarketInk: (W)right On Communications launches new specialized agencies
by Rick Griffen | Times of San Diego
(W)right On Communications (WOC), a San Diego-based strategic communications and public relations firm founded in 1998, has launched two new specialized agencies called WOC Resonance and WOC Signal.
WOC Resonance will focus on community trust environments, including senior living, tourism and nonprofit organizations. WOC Signal will focus on business-to-business (B2B) sectors, including clean energy, advanced manufacturing and cybersecurity.
“As the world gets more complex, it’s advantageous to specialize,” Julie Wright, WOC president and founder, told Times of San Diego. “Industry experience makes on-boarding quicker and brings efficiencies that clients appreciate.”
City Crews Have Cleared a Freeway Encampment Nearly 70 Times. People Keep Returning
By Marina Martinez Barba | Voice of San Diego
Manuel Cazanas has been living in a tent near a freeway on-ramp for more than a month. The 49-year-old moved to the area near Interstate 5 after suffering a spinal cord injury that cost him his job and apartment.
Despite his limited mobility, every few days he has to pack up his green tent and lug the rest of his belongings across the street. It’s a common routine for Cazanas and other homeless people in the area.
According to officials with the city’s Environmental Services Department, they have conducted almost 500 sweeps along freeway entrances and exits since the city got permission to remove encampments on state property last summer.
By Jennifer Lavasseur | The Conversation
At this point in NASA’s human spaceflight story, researchers have a substantial amount of material – documents, artifacts and images – with which to tell the stories of past flights to space. But with NASA’s Artemis II mission around the Moon now in the books, we’re getting a refreshed look at space.
And the digital photographs transmitted back to Earth – even mid-mission – tell a modern story of the crew’s experience. Entire generations born after Apollo 17’s last close-up looks at the Moon in 1972 may hardly believe the reality of Artemis II in the age of AI-generated deep fakes. But this mission was real, and four humans can tell the tale of their adventure using the photographs safely stored on memory cards now in NASA’s hands.
As a space historian and curator well-versed in the visual culture of human spaceflight, I’ve long anticipated seeing the photographs of a return to the Moon.

