Lawyer Claims Environmental Analysis of Midway Rising Flawed; Residents Destined to Gridlock; Taxpayers to Pay for Project Infrastructure

 Frank Gormlie  March 4, 2026  0 Comments on Lawyer Claims Environmental Analysis of Midway Rising Flawed; Residents Destined to Gridlock; Taxpayers to Pay for Project Infrastructure

Attorney Represents Point Loma Residents Increasingly Alarmed at Coming Gridlock

By Jennifer van Grove / San Diego Union-Tribune / March 3, 2026

A letter sent last week to San Diego leaders asserts that the environmental analysis for the Midway Rising project is legally flawed, and will, if approved, not only lead to additional gridlock in the area but force taxpayers to bear the brunt of infrastructure needs because of the limited scope of study.

The legal letter, addressed to Mayor Todd Gloria and San Diego City Council members, identifies six areas where the project’s state-mandated environmental impact report is described as substantially deficient. The most severe omission is said to be the report’s failure to evaluate the cumulative impacts of the anticipated redevelopment of the Navy’s nearby NAVWAR property.

The letter comes in the weeks leading up to the report’s presumed certification by the council members, which would pave the way for the city’s sports arena real estate in the Midway District to be remade with thousands of apartments and a new entertainment venue.

The letter was written by Kathryn Pettit, an attorney with Chatten-Brown Law Group, on behalf of her clients, J. Keith Behner and Catherine Stiefel of Point Loma. The couple hired the law firm, as well as a traffic engineer, during the environmental review process to study the documents as they became increasingly alarmed about the project’s long-term implications for congestion, Behner told the Union-Tribune.

Continue Reading Lawyer Claims Environmental Analysis of Midway Rising Flawed; Residents Destined to Gridlock; Taxpayers to Pay for Project Infrastructure

Tax on San Diego’s Empty Second Homes Goes to June Ballot

 Frank Gormlie  March 4, 2026  1 Comment on Tax on San Diego’s Empty Second Homes Goes to June Ballot

By Lori Weisberg / San Diego Union-Tribune / March 4, 2026

In a near-unanimous decision, the San Diego City Council agreed Tuesday to let voters decide whether a hefty tax should be imposed on thousands of second homes that are sitting empty most of the year.

The proposal, which will appear on the June ballot, is a divisive one and drew scores of people on both sides of the issue eager to voice their feelings on a tax that council members believe will be a key step forward in expanding the supply of rental and for-sale housing in San Diego.

The “empty homes tax,” as it is being called, would impose an initial annual tax of $8,000 on more than 5,000 homes unoccupied for more than half a year — plus a $4,000 surcharge for corporate-owned dwellings. In subsequent years, the tax would rise to $10,000, with the surcharge increasing to $5,000.

It is the brainchild of Councilmember Sean Elo-Rivera, who just a month ago failed to win support from his colleagues for a far broader measure that would have also taxed whole-home short-term rentals.

Continue Reading Tax on San Diego’s Empty Second Homes Goes to June Ballot

SOHO: Package A Advances — Now So Does the Fight

 Source  March 4, 2026  0 Comments on SOHO: Package A Advances — Now So Does the Fight

From SOHO / March-April 2026 Newsletter

San Diego’s historic districts and individually designated resources are not abstract planning concepts. They are neighborhoods, cultural landscapes, and places that tell the story of our region and its people. Once protections are weakened or removed, the impacts are often permanent. That is why careful environmental review and adherence to adopted community plans are essential.

On February 24, 2026, the San Diego City Council voted to approve the so-called “Preservation and Progress Package A,” following extensive public testimony in opposition, and repeated warnings regarding the measure’s violations of law. Environmental review and preservation safeguards exist to prevent irreversible harm to historic neighborhoods. The Council chose to ignore those safeguards.

Many San Diegans left City Hall that day disheartened, not because preservation lost a political fight, but because the Council chose to advance destructive changes to our historic preservation ordinance without the environmental review and public accountability the law requires.

Citywide opposition was overwhelming. Since the City released the Preservation and Progress initiative, over 600 written comments were submitted, with roughly 12 to 1 opposed. Twenty-eight community planning groups voted no, along with 12 city wide historic organizations. The City’s own Historical Resources Board rejected it twice, in two separate votes. Preservation organizations representing thousands of residents across San Diego urged caution, transparency, and lawful process.

Yet Package A passed. Council President Joe LaCava acknowledged the breadth of public concern and voted against the measure. The remaining members present, who numbered only 5, as a third of the council was missing in action, voted in favor.

Continue Reading SOHO: Package A Advances — Now So Does the Fight

Why Did These Americans Have to Die? The White House Still Doesn’t Know.

 Frank Gormlie  March 4, 2026  0 Comments on Why Did These Americans Have to Die? The White House Still Doesn’t Know.

No one still knows  why these 4 American servicemembers had to die. Trump doesn’t know. Hegsleth doesn’t know. Rubio doesn’t know.

They were killed in an Iranian drone strike on Sunday, March 1.

Yet, here they are – as the Pentagon has identified them of the six US service members who have died. The multiple reasons that Trump and gang have given for attacking Iran since it all began have varied with the time of day and night. From “regime change” to wiping out missiles they don’t have, or to making the first strike before they did ….Trump still hasn’t addressed the nation on the widening war. 

CNN:

The soldiers are Capt. Cody Khork, 35; Sgt. 1st Class Noah Tietjens, 42; Sgt. 1st Class Nicole Amor, 39; and Sgt. Declan Coady, 20. All four were assigned to the 103rd Sustainment Command, an Army Reserve sustainment unit out of Iowa.

The two other soldiers who were killed in the strike on Sunday have not yet been identified.

CNN first reported that the suspected drone strike hit a temporary tactical operations center at the port of Shuaiba in Kuwait on Sunday. At the time of their deaths the soldiers were serving with 1st Theater Sustainment Command.

A source familiar with the situation described the operation center as a triple-wide trailer with office space inside; the building was surrounded by concrete barriers that are typically used to protect military structures overseas from things like car bombs and improvised explosive devices. However, there was nothing overhead that could shield the building from drones or missiles.

Continue Reading Why Did These Americans Have to Die? The White House Still Doesn’t Know.

Small Crowd, Big Issues at OB Planning Board Meeting

 Staff  March 4, 2026  0 Comments on Small Crowd, Big Issues at OB Planning Board Meeting

Historic District at Risk, Seawall Debate, and a Call for a “Seat at the Table”

By Jillian Butler

March 3rd, 2026–The Ocean Beach Planning Board met Tuesday night, March 3, at the Ocean Beach Recreation Center on Santa Monica Avenue. Only seven residents attended in person, with a handful more joining via Zoom — a modest turnout for discussions that could significantly impact OB’s historic character and coastline.

Notably absent were representatives from City Council District 2, State Senator Akila Weber, Assemblymember Tasha Boerner Horvath, and County Supervisor Terra Lawson-Remer. In a meeting centered on preservation, development, and public safety, their absence did not go unnoticed.

Mayor’s Rep Catches Flak Over “Package A” Passage

Randy Reyes, representing Mayor Todd Gloria’s office, informed the board that City Council had passed Preservation Package A. The new policy could affect OB’s  Emerging Cottage Historic District — potentially making it harder for the district to qualify for historic protection.

Continue Reading Small Crowd, Big Issues at OB Planning Board Meeting

Community Planning Group Elections This Week for Normal Heights, Ocean Beach, Scripps Ranch and La Jolla

 Kate Callen  March 3, 2026  0 Comments on Community Planning Group Elections This Week for Normal Heights, Ocean Beach, Scripps Ranch and La Jolla

Planning Group Elections This Week in San Diego

San Diego’s Community Planning Groups (CPGs) hold annual elections every March. Here are dates, times, and locations for in-person voting at some of this week’s elections. Be sure to bring your driver’s license or another form of ID showing your home address.

Tuesday, March 3

Normal Heights will accept ballots from 6:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. at the Normal Heights Community Center at 4649 Hawley Boulevard.

https://normalheightscpg.org/notice-of-election/

Ocean Beach requires voters to download and print a registration form and ballot (available on website below). In-person voting takes place between 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. at the Ocean Beach Recreation Center at 4726 Santa Monica Avenue.

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Community Coalition Bulletin: This Week at City Hall — March 2–6

 Staff  March 2, 2026  0 Comments on Community Coalition Bulletin: This Week at City Hall — March 2–6

Community Coalition Bulletin: This Week at City Hall, March 2 — 6

The San Diego Community Coalition publishes this email bulletin to keep our members and San Diego residents informed about important Council and Planning Commission hearings and other city public meetings.

Tuesday, March 3: City Council, 2:00 p.m.

Agenda:

Item 330: Performance Audit of the City’s Key Performance Indicators

Why it matters: The City Auditor states that “key performance indicators (KPIs) are critical tools to … evaluate the City’s programs and services and deliver improved outcomes for residents.” But the Auditor has found that “the City underutilizes KPIs [and] lacks a cohesive approach to KPIs.” Recommendations include publishing an annual City KPI performance report and creating a publicly accessible dashboard with historical performance data. We can only hope.

Item S501: Consideration of an Empty Homes Tax Ballot Measure

Why it matters: Sean Elo-Rivera’s proposal for a yearly $8,000 tax on more than 5,000 mostly unoccupied homes faces a steep uphill battle.

Continue Reading Community Coalition Bulletin: This Week at City Hall — March 2–6

Congress, Do Your Job and End This Illegal War by the US and Israel

 Source  March 3, 2026  3 Comments on Congress, Do Your Job and End This Illegal War by the US and Israel

Congress must assert its constitutional authority over matters of war and peace against an out-of-control, rogue president and executive branch, and vote in favor of the Iran War Powers Resolutions.

By Kevin Martin / Common Dreams / March 2, 2026

Once again, the United States and Israel are illegally attacking Iran, as they did last June. It is already a regional war, which will take a horrible toll on ordinary people in many countries, with reports a girls’ school was bombed, killing at least 85 people.

Unlike the limited strikes in last June’s 12-day war, this is aimed not just at Iran’s nuclear or military facilities, but at regime change in Iran, as President Donald Trump declared, and government targets in Tehran have been hit, with Israel claiming Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed. Predictably, Iran is firing back at Israel and at US military bases in the region.

Late last week, the Foreign Minister of Oman, who had been mediating negotiations between the US and Iran, stated prospects were good for a possible agreement. However, according to an Israeli official, the talks were apparently a treacherous ruse, as the US and Israel had planned coordinated attacks on Iran for months.

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San Diego May Soon Regulate E-Bikes for Children and Passengers

 Source  March 3, 2026  0 Comments on San Diego May Soon Regulate E-Bikes for Children and Passengers

Children Under 12 Would Be Banned

By Esmeralda Perez / CBS8 / February 25, 2026

San Diego may soon implement electric bike regulations, as Councilmember Raul Campillo has proposed an initiative aiming to address growing safety concerns about misuse and excessive speeding on e-bikes throughout the city.

The proposed regulations would ban children under 12 from riding Class 1 and Class 2 e-bikes. The proposal also restricts passengers to bicycles specifically designed with a permanent second seat.

“We’re seeing a lot of young people show up to ERs, we’re seeing a lot of seniors who are walking down the sidewalk who get hit by irresponsible e-bike riders that are going way too fast and so we’re really just trying to preserve public health, safety that’s really at the heart of what we’re doing,” Campillo, who represents District 7, said.
Campillo shared that state law empowers San Diego to add e-bike regulations to its municipal code.

Continue Reading San Diego May Soon Regulate E-Bikes for Children and Passengers

Reader Rant: ‘Oppose $8,000 Tax on 2nd Homes — On City Council Docket March 3rd’

 Source  March 3, 2026  30 Comments on Reader Rant: ‘Oppose $8,000 Tax on 2nd Homes — On City Council Docket March 3rd’

By Lisa Mortensen

Well, the city has concocted another tax proposal to inflict pain on San Diegans and divert attention from the real issue of ballooning staff and salaries that has created an ever-increasing deficit.  The city asks for your input on surveys of community projects that you may want to have implemented, but this is a diversion tactic to take your eyes off of the true culprits; our exploding deficit that is the making of our elected officials at city hall.

These ‘surveys’ are disingenuous and will lead us to be forced to create community foundations to pay for projects on our wish lists; all the while robbing the city’s taxpayer-funded accounts.  This indirectly is a double payment for what we have already paid for in our property taxes and sales taxes. 

Continue Reading Reader Rant: ‘Oppose $8,000 Tax on 2nd Homes — On City Council Docket March 3rd’

Assemblyman Chris Ward’s Plan to Prevent Housing Development in Mission Bay Park

 Source  March 3, 2026  7 Comments on Assemblyman Chris Ward’s Plan to Prevent Housing Development in Mission Bay Park

By Jeff McDonald / San Diego Union-Tribune / February 28, 2026

When San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria last year asked the City Council to declare three commercial properties within Mission Bay Park as surplus land in order to negotiate new leases, it did not go over well.

The recommendation, based on the requirements of state law, alarmed council members and environmentalists concerned the designation could pave the way for housing and other development on the cherished waterfront.

And it was resisted even after Gloria promised that a developer’s unsolicited effort to build 900 homes there would never be approved.

By the fall, city officials had dropped the surplus-land effort and decided instead to pursue exemptions with the help of state housing officials and lawmakers.

Now Assemblymember Chris Ward, a San Diego Democrat who previously served on the City Council, has introduced a bill that would exempt the city-owned Mission Bay Park from the state law that undergirded the recommendation, and that was designed to prioritize housing on unneeded public property.

Ward’s legislation, introduced as Assembly Bill 2525, would exempt from the Surplus Land Act all of the property included in the Mission Bay master plan — more than 4,200 acres all told.

Continue Reading Assemblyman Chris Ward’s Plan to Prevent Housing Development in Mission Bay Park

Navy Says ‘Human Error’ in Jet that Flew Pilot-less Over Point Loma and Crashed into Bay

 Frank Gormlie  March 3, 2026  1 Comment on Navy Says ‘Human Error’ in Jet that Flew Pilot-less Over Point Loma and Crashed into Bay

By Alex Cheney / CBS8 / February 27, 2026

A Navy investigation has determined that human error caused an E/A-18G Growler military jet to crash into San Diego Bay during a training exercise on Feb. 12, 2025, according to information the Navy shared with reporters today. The two crew members safely ejected from the aircraft and sustained only minor injuries.

The investigation revealed that unfamiliar software triggered warnings during aerial refueling, complicating the crew’s approach to Naval Air Station North Island. Pilots contended with a wet runway and a tailwind while attempting to land, employing an aero brake in an effort to slow the aircraft. However, investigators determined the measures proved insufficient.

Gregory Feith, a former senior investigator with the National Transportation Safety Board, said naval air traffic control should have directed the pilots to use a different runway. “In aviation we try to never land with a tailwind,” said Gregory Feith.

Continue Reading Navy Says ‘Human Error’ in Jet that Flew Pilot-less Over Point Loma and Crashed into Bay

The Future of Balboa Park: A Community Conversation — Sat., March 28th

 Staff  March 3, 2026  2 Comments on The Future of Balboa Park: A Community Conversation — Sat., March 28th

“The Future of Balboa Park: A Community Conversation”

When: Saturday, March 28, 9:30 a.m. to 11:00 a.m.
Where: Mission Valley Library Community Room

“The Future of Balboa Park: A Community Conversation” will invite members of the San Diego public, who are the real stakeholders of the Park, to begin exploring new strategies for effective park stewardship and responsible park management.

The town hall, organized by the San Diego Community Coalition and Neighbors for a Better San Diego, will be facilitated by two foremost Balboa Park advocates, landscape architect/urban planner Vicki Estrada and former City Architect Michael Stepner.

With increased public interest in San Diego’s “Crown Jewel,” Estrada and Stepner will lead this public discussion of critical issues, including:

  • How do we ensure that the park has the resources it needs to provide the services and benefits San Diegans deserve from this regional asset?
  • How can we unify Park stakeholders to work together toward common goals?
Continue Reading The Future of Balboa Park: A Community Conversation — Sat., March 28th