Alongside their four pets, the Porter-Comptons jumped into the family vehicle to evacuate from the Fairview Fire.
Tina Compton did everything with her husband and her daughter.
Although Chitwood has confirmed the deaths of Ian and Mikayla, the Riverside County Coroner’s Office said they have not been able to positively identify the pair because of the severity of their injuries.
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Father and Daughter Killed as They Tried to Escape Fairview Fire, Family SaysA father and daughter were killed as they tried to escape a fast-moving brush fire that raced through a Riverside County canyon this week. Ian Matthew Compton and daughter Mikayla Porter died Monday in the Fairview Fire near Hemet, family members said. Compton’s wife remains hospitalized with critical injuries, brother Tim Chitwood told NBCLA. “They started taking off, and I…
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Rep. Katie Porter’s university housing deal draws scrutinyIn an interview, Porter declined to say whether her housing arrangement was appropriate. But she said she “followed the applicable (University of California) policies, as well as all applicable sta…
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Creating Shared ValueThe capitalist system is under siege. In recent years business has been criticized as a major cause of social, environmental, and economic problems. Companies are widely thought to be prospering at the expense of their communities. Trust in business has fallen to new lows, leading government officials to set policies that undermine competitiveness and sap economic growth. Business is caught in a vicious circle. A big part of the problem lies with companies themselves, which remain trapped in an outdated, narrow approach to value creation. Focused on optimizing short-term financial performance, they overlook the greatest unmet needs in the market as well as broader influences on their long-term success. Why else would companies ignore the well-being of their customers, the depletion of natural resources vital to their businesses, the viability of suppliers, and the economic distress of the communities in which they produce and sell? It doesn’t have to be this way, say Porter, of Harvard Business School, and Kramer, the managing director of the social impact advisory firm FSG. Companies could bring business and society back together if they redefined their purpose as creating “shared value”—generating economic value in a way that also produces value for society by addressing its challenges. A shared value approach reconnects company success with social progress. Firms can do this in three distinct ways: by reconceiving products and markets, redefining productivity in the value chain, and building supportive industry clusters at the company’s locations. A number of companies known for their hard-nosed approach to business—including GE, Wal-Mart, Nestlé, Johnson & Johnson, and Unilever—have already embarked on important initiatives in these areas. Nestlé, for example, redesigned its coffee procurement processes, working intensively with small farmers in impoverished areas who were trapped in a cycle of low productivity, poor quality, and environmental degradation. Nestl
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Friends and family mourn tragic loss of father, daughter who died in Fairview FireTina Compton lost her husband and daughter, who had severe autism, when flames surrounded their car as they attempted to flee the Fairview Fire.
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