Month: May 2025

Vote Soon! Trash Fee Protest Deadline Is June 9

 Kate Callen  May 30, 2025  3 Comments on Vote Soon! Trash Fee Protest Deadline Is June 9

By Kate Callen / May 29, 2025

San Diegans have just 10 days to submit written protests to the City Clerk about proposed trash fees for residential properties.

For the price of a postage stamp, property owners can register their disgust with one of the most offensive City Hall scams in recent memory. If voters had known the truth in 2022 – that new trash collection services would cost $53 a month – Proposition B would have been defeated.

Instead, it narrowly passed, thanks to a much lower estimate of $23 to $29 a month from the City’s Independent Budget Analyst (IBA). In a May 5 Union-Tribune article headlined “San Diego Trash Fee Collection Was Riddled With Errors,” the IBA said its faulty work was “an honest mistake based on some bad information and some miscalculations.”

Jordan More, the IBA analyst responsible for the miscalculation, had this to say: “Mea culpa – I am human.” He is also well compensated. According to Transparent California, the City paid More $248,117.68 in total pay and benefits in 2023.

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Our Not-For-Long Free Press

 Source  May 30, 2025  5 Comments on Our Not-For-Long Free Press

By Chuck Dunning / May 30, 2025
In his Gettysburg Address, Abraham Lincoln called this country “a new nation conceived in liberty” guaranteed by the First Amendment of the Constitution: “Congress shall make no law …abridging the freedom of speech, or the press.”

In the 1920s, with the advent of radio and later television, Congress realized the enormous potential in these media for the public good. It deemed the airways as belonging to the public. For the right to use them, license holders would be required to operate in the “public interest, convenience and necessity.”

In 1949, the Federal Communications Commission went a step further and passed what became known as The Fairness Doctrine, requiring radio and television stations to devote airtime to issues of public importance and to present opposing perspectives. But in 1987, the Reagan administration, believing the growth of cable TV and the Internet would guarantee multiple points of view, repealed the Fairness Doctrine.

Today, that guarantee of freedom of the press is under assault like never before.

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Prebys Foundation Awards $7 Million in ‘Rapid Response’ Medical Research Funds

 Source  May 29, 2025  1 Comment on Prebys Foundation Awards $7 Million in ‘Rapid Response’ Medical Research Funds

The Conrad Prebys Foundation / May 29, 2025

As federal funding for medical and life sciences research faces deep and destabilizing cuts, Prebys Foundation is stepping in with a rapid response package totaling $7 million to defend San Diego’s biomedical research sector?—?one of the world’s leading innovation hubs.

Federal grants have historically provided nearly half of all medical research funding in the United States. This support has enabled transformative advances in drug discovery, fueled job growth, and secured America’s position as a global leader in the life sciences.

In San Diego, the impact has been profound, home to internationally renowned research institutes, universities, and biotech startups that together make up a biomedical ecosystem unlike any other in the country.

Executive orders and steep reductions in federal research investment are threatening critical local initiatives, halting active projects, and forcing early- and mid-career scientists to look abroad or leave the field altogether. Without swift and targeted action, the region risks an exodus of talent and a slowdown in the medical breakthroughs that improve lives and drive the economy.

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Ferbert: SD Councilmembers Can’t Reject Pay Hikes

 Source  May 29, 2025  4 Comments on Ferbert: SD Councilmembers Can’t Reject Pay Hikes

By David Garrick / SD Union Tribune / May 29, 2025

At least two San Diego council members want to give back future pay raises to help solve a budget crisis, but City Attorney Heather Ferbert says a city law explicitly allowing them to do that is nullified by the city charter.

Council members haven’t had the power to vote for or against their own pay raises since a 2018 ballot measure that tied their compensation — including any raises — directly to the salaries of state Superior Court judges.

Their annual salaries were hiked from $182,955 to $183,545 last December and are expected to be increased again later this year when Superior Court judges get their annual pay bump.

The goal of the ballot measure was allowing council members to get pay raises without the awkwardness and controversy of voting for those raises themselves.

Supporters say the pay increases under the measure have significantly boosted the quality of candidates seeking office because the salaries are high enough to attract lawyers, doctors and other professionals.

The ballot measure also tied the salaries of the mayor and city attorney to Superior Court judges, but they get equal pay to the judges while council members only get 75% of the judicial salaries. Annual pay for the mayor and city attorney rose from $243,940 to $244,727 in December.

The city’s gaping budget deficit this spring, which has been estimated at anywhere between $258 million and $353 million, has prompted some to suggest the mayor and council members should agree to reject any raises.

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Local News Dominates Non-Profit Journalism

 Source  May 29, 2025  0 Comments on Local News Dominates Non-Profit Journalism

Institute for Nonprofit News / May 28, 2025

For the first time, local news outlets make up the largest segment of the Institute for Nonprofit News’ member network, which earlier this month reached 500 independent, nonprofit news organizations across North America.

The percentage of local news outlets in INN’s eighth annual Index survey rose to 51% in 2024 from 48% in 2023. Along with this growth in local outlets, INN sees a larger share of newsrooms (52%) covering current news and events on a range of topics. While more than half of newsrooms in the INN Network still focus on deep, explanatory reporting, the proportion of outlets that focus exclusively on investigative news has declined, to 27%.

The differences are most pronounced when compared over the eight years has tracked the field. In 2017, 39% of INN members focused primarily on investigative reporting, and 19% focused primarily on news and events.

“INN’s roots are in investigative journalism. And while many of our members still produce that kind of in-depth accountability reporting, today they also cover topics like local government, schools, housing, and jobs,” said Karen Rundlet, CEO of the Institute for Nonprofit News, “It’s the type of coverage that’s essential to any healthy, functioning town, or city or county. And local news outlets keep turning to INN to learn how to increase their revenues and their reach.”

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Of Dogs Lost and Found

 Source  May 28, 2025  3 Comments on Of Dogs Lost and Found

By Brae Canlen  / May 28, 2025

Either I’m a magnet for lost dogs, or I proactively find them roaming the streets of my North Park neighborhood. I suppose both could be true.

Let’s start with Lucky, the beagle I found standing on the sidewalk, barking her little head off. Lucky had a collar with a phone number, which I called. A woman answered (Lucky’s owner) and told me she was vacationing in Northern California. A pet sitter was supposed to come by and pick up the dog.

We agreed that I would put Lucky back in the house. The back door was unlocked, she said. Who goes on vacation and leaves their back door open? Lucky’s owner does.

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Paid Parking in Balboa : A Todd Gloria Production

 Kate Callen  May 28, 2025  23 Comments on Paid Parking in Balboa : A Todd Gloria Production

By Kate Callen / May 28, 2025

How many schemes to plunder Balboa Park have died on the vine?

There was the 15-story “observation wheel” in the Plaza de Panama. The decommissioned Atlas Rocket near the Air and Space Museum. The boutique hotel on Inspiration Point. The Cabrillo Bridge bypass with the 800-car parking garage.

None of these ploys stood a chance. History has taught us that the surest way to galvanize San Diegans is to meddle with their “crown jewel” park. And if you really want to enrage them, decree that all visitors – families, tourists, class trips, volunteers – must pay for parking for the first time in the Park’s century-old history.

That once-unthinkable scenario is the latest in a string of frantic proposals from Mayor Todd Gloria.

Gloria is desperate. City coffers are draining. Voters rejected his sales tax because they didn’t trust him with their money. His new trash fees have hit the skids.

The Mayor could save money by shrinking the city payroll with layoffs, starting with his bloated management team. That’s what business leaders do. When money runs low, executives make painful cuts to keep the lights on.

But Gloria knows nothing about the world of business. He only knows the cult of personality. His aides are his acolytes, the entourage that keeps him bubble-wrapped in adulation. He’d sooner rehome his chihuahua than part with his staff.

Instead, the Mayor wants to wring money out of Park visitors.

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Cottonwood Sand Mine Goes Before San Diego County Planning Commission on Friday, June 13

 Source  May 27, 2025  5 Comments on Cottonwood Sand Mine Goes Before San Diego County Planning Commission on Friday, June 13

By Miriam Raftery / East County Magazine / May 20, 2025

Years after the Cottonwood Sand Mine was first proposed along the Sweetwater River on the site of the Cottonwood Golf course in Rancho San Diego, the San Diego County Planning Commission will hold a hearing on the proposed sand mine. The latest draft environmental impact report can be viewed here .

The hearing, originally set for April, will now be held Friday, June 13 at 9a.m. at the San Diego County Operations Center hearing room, 5520 Overland Ave., San Diego.

The Valle de Oro Community Panning Group in March voted 10-1 to oppose the controversial project, with one abstention, as ECM reported. (Rag repost here.)

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A Short Rant on a Dangerous Condition on the Beach in OB

 Source  May 27, 2025  3 Comments on A Short Rant on a Dangerous Condition on the Beach in OB

By Geoff Page

I am writing this today to express my extreme frustration with the lack of care or effort on the part of the Ocean Beach lifeguards when notified of a dangerous condition on the beach. The right rear skid of Tower 3 is bent into an upright position, sticking out of the sand like a knife blade where lots of people might encounter it.

Saturday morning, May 24, I sent an email and a picture of the condition to the lifeguard website. Because I was concerned the problem would not get attention quickly enough I called the weekend number. I knew the beach would be very crowded with families and children. I was dispatched through to the OB lifeguards.

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Residents From Across San Diego and Councilmembers Question Mayor Gloria’s Budget Priorities — But Where Is Outrage from Ocean Beach?

 Frank Gormlie  May 27, 2025  2 Comments on Residents From Across San Diego and Councilmembers Question Mayor Gloria’s Budget Priorities — But Where Is Outrage from Ocean Beach?

Mayor Gloria is struggling against the pushback by residents from across San Diego and by City Council members in reaction to his proposals to offset a $258 million budget shortfall. He has proposed deep cuts to parks, libraries, recreation centers, youth programs, bathrooms during the off season, beach fire pits, and San Diego Humane Society’s animal services.

In the midst of all this, Voice of San Diego calculates that the city is headed “for its biggest budget showdown in the 20 years since the city adopted the strong-mayor form of government.” Gloria and councilmembers “not only disagree on top priorities, they are showing open contempt for one another.” Councilmember Henry Foster mused that perhaps it’s time to scrap the strong Mayor system. The Voice hits one of the nails on its head:

A major bone of contention is the Mayor’s insistence on retaining unclassified managers at City Hall while simultaneously seeking to cut park and library services and impose parking fees at Balboa Park while eliminating dozens of positions.

Meanwhile, The Times of San Diego (recently merged with Peninsula Beacon et tal.) questioned coastal residents whether they thought there was a better way for the city to address its budgetary woes. Several were quoted:

Sha Rose of Ocean Beach said: “Bathrooms, libraries, etc., it’s going cost more if they aren’t open. This isn’t the answer.”

Point Loma nursery owner Walter Andersen was quoted: “If they close the restrooms, it will be a huge mess. Mission Bay is a huge asset to the City and should be funded properly. This should include fire rings. I see the lifeguard stations need some attention, also. This should have been planned for, too. Who’s running the show?”

Michael Pallamary of Bay Ho Alcott said: “The mayor and City Council have created a new agency called DODGE. They advise our elected officials on how to dodge questions about where our tax dollars are going. Down the drain we go. A City in ruin.”

Continue Reading Residents From Across San Diego and Councilmembers Question Mayor Gloria’s Budget Priorities — But Where Is Outrage from Ocean Beach?

Correia Middle School Students Win Awards From C-SPAN Video Competition

 Source  May 27, 2025  0 Comments on Correia Middle School Students Win Awards From C-SPAN Video Competition

By Madison Beveridge / Pt Loma-OB Monthly SDUT / May 25, 2025

Three students at Point Loma’s Correia Middle School were rewarded for short documentary-style films they made for the C-SPAN network’s 2025 StudentCam competition.

Students, parents, teachers, administrators and C-SPAN representatives turned out to honor the young filmmakers at a gathering May 21.

The trio’s works were among nearly 1,700 student entries from across the country.

For the 21st edition of the competition, C-SPAN asked contestants to focus their films on the issue most important to them or their community as though they were presenting it to the president of the United States.

Harper Haden and Helena de la Houssaye, seventh-graders at Correia Middle School, won second prize and $1,500 for their video titled “One Pill Can Kill,” a look at the fentanyl crisis and how the San Diego-Mexico border plays a role in fentanyl and other drugs entering the U.S.

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Midway Homeless Shelter Caught Up in Dispute Between City and County

 Source  May 27, 2025  1 Comment on Midway Homeless Shelter Caught Up in Dispute Between City and County

Deficits and a coming demolition threaten to shutter the Rosecrans facility that offers mental health services.

By Blake Nelson / San Diego Union-Tribune / May 26, 2025

The city of San Diego has nowhere near enough shelter for everybody asking. Yet an ongoing dispute between city and county officials has reduced the number of available beds even more.

The Rosecrans homeless shelter, a large tent in the Midway district that helps residents with mental health issues, has stopped accepting new people, leaving 14 spots open as of Wednesday, according to Alpha Project CEO Bob McElroy. The San Diego Housing Commission has also halted intakes at 8 other programs in anticipation of Rosecrans’ possible closure at the end of June, and two staffers at the tent recently quit to take other jobs.

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