Month: May 2026

Why Mission Beach Is the Way It Is: Geography and Development

 Source  May 20, 2026  1 Comment on Why Mission Beach Is the Way It Is: Geography and Development

by Debbie L. Sklar / Times of San Diego / May 16, 2026

Mission Beach exists because of geography; it also exists because of development. The neighborhood sits on a narrow strip of land between the Pacific Ocean and Mission Bay, a coastal landform that shaped how the area could grow from the beginning.

The popular beach developed on a narrow sandy landform shaped over time by wave action, sediment movement, and shoreline processes. Unlike broader coastal plains, the geography limited expansion in both directions. The Pacific Ocean created a fixed western boundary, while Mission Bay formed the eastern edge, confining development to a narrow corridor.

In the early 20th century, the area became part of San Diego’s growing coastal recreation landscape. As shoreline access improved, Mission Beach developed as both a residential neighborhood and a seaside destination. Early on, tents and temporary structures occasionally appeared along the sand, reflecting its use as a seasonal coastal destination before full development. One of the most significant early projects was Belmont Park, which opened in 1925 during a broader era of California coastal amusement park development.

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Hardcore Forager and Former OBcean Gives Tips on How to Live Off the Land

 Source  May 20, 2026  0 Comments on Hardcore Forager and Former OBcean Gives Tips on How to Live Off the Land

by Frank Sabatini Jr. / Times of San Diego / May 14, 2026

Former Ocean Beach resident is on a hardcore foraging adventure. He’s back with tips on how to live off the land

Not every person who adopts a healthy diet undergoes the culinary awakening that has thrust Robin Greenfield into the national spotlight.

Greenfield, 39, is an extreme forager. He eats strictly off the land, which includes at times cooking deer killed roadside by cars.

Yet his lifestyle changes extend far beyond his diet. His largely demonetized life is devoid of credit cards and bank accounts. He doesn’t own a cell phone, although he possesses a computer for managing speaking engagements and educational foraging lessons that he conducts throughout the country.

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Point Loma High Boys’ Volleyball Team Wins School’s First CIF Title in Sport – and More

 Source  May 20, 2026  0 Comments on Point Loma High Boys’ Volleyball Team Wins School’s First CIF Title in Sport – and More

by Scott Hopkins / Times of San Diego / May 19, 2026

A first-time occurrence of any kind is big news at a 101-year-old school and Point Loma High’s boys volleyball team accomplished the feat May 16.

Playing in the San Diego CIF Div. V finals, the Pointers defeated Hoover High 3-0 to win the school’s first volleyball title.

The Pointers entered the playoffs as a No. 4 seed with a first-round bye. Next was a match against No. 5 seed Southwest of El Centro. The Pointers defeated them 3-0 before winning 3-1 in a huge match at No. 1 seed Del Lago Academy, sending them on to the finals against the No. 2-seeded Cardinals.

Both the Pointers and Cardinals had to travel to Oceanside’s MiraCosta Community College, site of the finals. But the Pointers arrived ready for action, led by head coach Ethan Phung and assistant Justin Phung.

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San Diego’s Homeless Sweeps Cost Millions — With Limited Impact

 Source  May 20, 2026  0 Comments on San Diego’s Homeless Sweeps Cost Millions — With Limited Impact

From Governing / May 12, 2026

It’s a warm April day, bordering on hot, with the midday sun overhead. Still, Savannah Flores stays beneath a black tarp she has fashioned into a tent. If she tries to climb out, she says, it might collapse. So she agrees to talk through a small hole in the plastic.

Two or three days a week, she says, city crews sweep through this half-block stretch of 17th Street. The roughly two dozen people who usually camp there get 24 hours’ notice to pack up. Flores, 35, has been homeless for about a year. Whenever police come to clear out the area, she goes around the corner and returns later.

“They come and they treat us pretty much like we’re part of the trash,” she says. “They tell us to disappear somewhere, to be invisible.”

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The Brutal Reality of San Diego’s Draconian Budget Cuts … Explained

 Source  May 20, 2026  5 Comments on The Brutal Reality of San Diego’s Draconian Budget Cuts … Explained

by Jenna Ramiscal / inewsource / May 19, 2026

Hundreds of residents whose taxpayer dollars fuel daily operations have taken to City Hall in recent weeks to air their frustrations over Mayor Todd Gloria’s proposed answer to San Diego’s budget crisis this year.

That’s because Gloria’s budget slashes millions of dollars in funding for arts, parks, libraries and more in order to close a more than $140 million deficit. Those cuts would impact the city’s lower-income, racially diverse areas the most, according to the Independent Budget Analyst office. About 40 city jobs would also be eliminated.

In many ways, a city’s budget is an outline of its leaders’ priorities. It drives community services like public safety, parks, libraries and transportation. When cuts are made, certain departments and services have to roll back.

Here in San Diego, cuts will impact the city’s 1.4 million residents who rely on those services.

Gloria’s $6.4 billion spending plan is not final. It will have gone through several revisions once the City Council approves a budget in June.

Here’s the timeline:

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Come One, Come All to Celebrate a True 50-Year Old Ocean Beach Victory — Tuesday, May 26

 Frank Gormlie  May 19, 2026  1 Comment on Come One, Come All to Celebrate a True 50-Year Old Ocean Beach Victory — Tuesday, May 26

Everyone is invited to come out and celebrate a 50-year old community victory for Ocean Beach. It’s the half-century celebration of the very first election to the OB Planning Board — and we’re having it this Tuesday, May 26th, at Dirty Birds OB. From 6 to 8pm.

We’ll have some finger-foods, good vibes and brief statements in solidarity of this election. There will be representatives from different OB groups including members of the current OB Planning Board.

If you’ve ever been a volunteer for anything in OB, then you’ll appreciate this event — and help honor the hundreds of OBceans who have volunteered for the planning board over the many years it has been in existence.

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The Largest Presidential Corruption Scandal in U.S. History as Trump Creates $1.8 Billion Slush Fund for Friends and J6 Rioters

 Source  May 19, 2026  3 Comments on The Largest Presidential Corruption Scandal in U.S. History as Trump Creates $1.8 Billion Slush Fund for Friends and J6 Rioters

Top Lawyer at Treasury Resigns in Protest and Disgust at $1.8 Billion Grift

The Treasury’s most senior lawyer has dramatically quit, just hours after the Trump administration unveiled a vast $1.776 billion fund to enrich Jan. 6 rioters and other MAGA loyalists. Brian Morrissey, the department’s general counsel, stepped down a mere seven months after his Senate confirmation, three sources aware of his decision told the New York Times.

His abrupt departure came on the same day that acting Attorney General Todd Blanche announced the so-called “Anti-Weaponization Fund.” Morrissey, who also served in Trump’s first administration, is a former clerk for Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, a George H. W. Bush appointee.

Go to Daily Beast for more

Trump’s Justice Department announces $1.8 billion fund slammed as ‘slush fund’

By Steve Benen / Maddowblog / May 19, 2026

The fact that we knew the scheme was coming didn’t make it any easier to accept. Three months after Donald Trump filed a radical (and by any fair measure, frivolous) $10 billion lawsuit against the Internal Revenue Service, the president’s lawyers announced Monday morning that they had agreed to withdraw the case.

Hours later, the other side of the agreement came to public light: In exchange for dropping his rather silly lawsuit, Trump’s own Justice Department announced the creation of a pool of money that it’s calling “The Anti-Weaponization Fund” — which Democrats and legal experts are more accurately characterizing as a “slush fund.”

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Arizona Police Arrest Person-of-Interest in Deadly Assault from October in Midway District

 Staff  May 18, 2026  0 Comments on Arizona Police Arrest Person-of-Interest in Deadly Assault from October in Midway District

A person of interest in the death of a man who was assaulted in the Midway District last October has been arrested in Mohave County, Arizona. 60-year-old Noel Frischknecht remains in jail for an outstanding San Diego County Superior Court arrest warrant connected to the death of a 68-year-old Brian Salatino. He was arrested by the Mohave County Sheriff’s Department.

Frischknecht is alleged to have assaulted Salatino around 5:40 p.m. on Oct. 26, 2025 in the 3300 block of Midway Drive in San Diego. Salatino was transported to a hospital, where he remained in a coma. After being hospitalized for approximately 100 days, he succumbed to his injuries and died on Feb. 3, 2026.

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SDG&E’s Profit-Oriented Business Model Is Not in the Public’s Interest

 Source  May 18, 2026  10 Comments on SDG&E’s Profit-Oriented Business Model Is Not in the Public’s Interest

by Anthony Dang / Times of San Diego / May 12, 2026

We posted a video last week recapping a recent protest against Sempra’s latest earnings report, and one comment captured exactly how many San Diegans currently feel: “big personal beef with SDG&E.”

Isn’t that the truth? How many conversations with friends and family eventually spiral into frustrations about skyrocketing energy bills? As summer approaches, many of us are preparing to do what we do every year: ration electricity, avoid turning on the A/C during heat waves, and hope we can stay afloat in one of the most expensive cities in the country.

Meanwhile, Sempra called its latest earnings a “great start” to the year. Of course it was. Last week, Sempra reported more than $1 billion in profits in just the first few months of 2026. Its CEO earned more than $22 million the year prior. For executives and shareholders, this system is working exactly as designed.

But for the rest of us — the ones paying some of the highest energy bills in California to fund these profits — it’s a horrible reality.

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OB Project Review Committee Has 2 Projects: Del Mar Ave. and Ocean Front Street

 Source  May 18, 2026  0 Comments on OB Project Review Committee Has 2 Projects: Del Mar Ave. and Ocean Front Street

Here’s the agenda for this week’s meeting of the Project Review Committee of the OB Planning Board, Tuesday, May 19.

Projects come before the review committee for a first pass – and usually the committee gives a recommendation to the full board.

The first is a permit to demolish 2 existing one-story houses and construct a 3-story unit and a a 2-story home at 4866–4870 Del Mar Avenue.

And the second is a permit to remodel two existing homes to include a second-story to each, at 1759 to 1761 Ocean Front Street.

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