San Diego Community Coalition Bulletin: This Week at City Hall June 22–26

 Staff  June 22, 2026  0 Comments on San Diego Community Coalition Bulletin: This Week at City Hall June 22–26

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

Monday, June 22: City Council, 2:00 p.m.

Agenda:

Item 200: Public Power Feasibility Study, Phase II Report

Item 201: SDG&E Franchise Independent Audit Report and Compliance Review

Why they matter: These items will shed light on two options: a new municipal energy utility (MEU) vs. the existing SDG&E utility. The Phase II report found that “financial projections support the feasibility of establishing an MEU.” The review found that SDG&E complies with its franchise agreement but adds “compliance alone does not fully resolve broader concerns regarding affordability, rate impacts, and alignment with the City’s policy objectives.”

Tuesday, June 23: City Council, 10:00 a.m.

Agenda: 

Item S501: Municipal Code Amendment Relating to Electric Bicycle Safety

Continue Reading San Diego Community Coalition Bulletin: This Week at City Hall June 22–26

What’s Behind the ‘White Buildings’ Near the End of OB’s Newport Ave.

 Staff  June 22, 2026  0 Comments on What’s Behind the ‘White Buildings’ Near the End of OB’s Newport Ave.
What’s New on Newport Avenue?

By Michael A. Hernandez

“Pop Punk Never Dies”. That’s the message written on the outside of the building at 5049 Newport Ave in Ocean Beach. Once home to OB’s first Japanese sushi and sake joint, Sapporo Restaurant, then later housing an outpost of Pacific Beach’s beloved dive bar and eatery, Cass Street Bar and Grill, 5049 Newport Ave is currently under new ownership, and what’s coming may be of interest to those who are anti-establishment… but pro-drinking establishment.

On February 13 of this year, a Public Notice of Application For Ownership Change was posted on the front door of the building.

The applicant’s name: “Drink 182 OB, LLC”. Marketing itself as San Diego’s Original Pop Punk Bar, Drink 182 promises to bring “a new kind of hospitality experience to Ocean Beach – built around the music, culture, and nostalgia that defined a generation”.

One of the owners of the pop-punk bar is creative director Jay NightRide. According to his profile on Linkedin, NightRide has collaborated with big names such as internationally renowned DJ and music executive Steve Aoki, motorcycle manufacturer and global lifestyle brand Harley Davidson, and legendary pop-punk band Blink-182, whose name served as the main inspiration for the name of the bar.

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Peninsula Business News: Awards and Free Ice Cream at An’s Gelato, Kombucha Tasting Room and Dennys Close, New Pizza in the Midway

 Frank Gormlie  June 19, 2026  0 Comments on Peninsula Business News: Awards and Free Ice Cream at An’s Gelato, Kombucha Tasting Room and Dennys Close, New Pizza in the Midway

An’s Gelato Named No.2 in America; Free Scoops Offered on July 1 at Ocean Beach Shop

San Diego’s An’s Gelato company has been named the No. 2 independently owned ice cream shop in America in USA Today’s 10Best Reader’s Choice Awards, which were announced Wednesday. It’s the fourth year the local company has been ranked in the USA Today contest. An’s ranked No. 1 in 2025 and 2024, and No. 2 in 2023.

An’s operates four shops in San Diego County, including Ocean Beach where in 2025, they opened An’s Electronic Repair in a former phone repair shop. A fifth is set to open soon in Oceanside’s iconic Top Gun House. The judges praised An’s for its scratch-made gelato and unique flavors, like brown butter, brookies (brownies and cookies), watermelon and mint sorbet. The judges also noted An’s  generous sampling policy, where employees encourage visitors to taste all seven flavors of the day before they buy.

To celebrate the latest 10Best honor, An’s scoop shops in OB, Normal Heights, and Del Mar will give away one free small gelato cup or cone per customer from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. July 1, while supplies last. Then the shops will close for the rest of that day to give employees the evening off.

Continue Reading Peninsula Business News: Awards and Free Ice Cream at An’s Gelato, Kombucha Tasting Room and Dennys Close, New Pizza in the Midway

Ocean Beach’s History Is ‘a Story of Landscape Before Labels’

 Source  June 19, 2026  0 Comments on Ocean Beach’s History Is ‘a Story of Landscape Before Labels’

by Debbie L. Sklar / Times of San Diego / June 18, 2026

Sand dunes, mussel beds, picnics.

Ocean Beach’s shoreline has been described in different ways over time, long before it became the coastal community known today.

Ocean Beach today is probably best known for its surf culture, its long concrete pier [that is permanently closed], and a tightly-knit neighborhood identity. But its earlier history is rooted less in formal place names and more in how people described the landscape: a broad stretch of sand shaped by wind, shifting dunes, and the former course of the San Diego River as it reached the Pacific.

That began to change in 1887, when developers William “Billy” Carlson and Frank Higgins subdivided the land and began marketing it as a seaside residential community under the name Ocean Beach.

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Body Washes Ashore Near Ocean Beach Pier Thursday

 Staff  June 19, 2026  3 Comments on Body Washes Ashore Near Ocean Beach Pier Thursday

An unidentified body washed ashore Thursday afternoon, June 18, near the Ocean Beach Pier.

Police were called to the area around 3 p.m. after someone had discovered the body.

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Juneteenth Reflections

 Ernie McCray  June 18, 2026  0 Comments on Juneteenth Reflections

by Ernie McCray

Juneteenth is a celebration
that causes me to wonder
what enslaved men and women
felt when they got the news
of their emancipation
approximately 900 days late.

So many of them, surely,
must have stood gasping and crying, in disbelief,
feeling joy from such an outrageously delayed freedom
while, simultaneously,
grieving from the realization
of all the hardships
that came from the years stolen from them,

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Today’s Safeguards Would Make City Manager Even Stronger than in Past — Come to Jack McGrory Talk, Saturday, June 20th

 Source  June 18, 2026  1 Comment on Today’s Safeguards Would Make City Manager Even Stronger than in Past — Come to Jack McGrory Talk, Saturday, June 20th

By Sue Taylor

Jack McGrory was City Manager during some of the early pension decisions, including the 1996 agreement often cited as a starting point in the City’s pension problems, but he was not City Manager when the financial and disclosure issues later came to light.

Those problems involved many players over a number of years, including elected officials, the pension board, labor and City leadership. After that crisis, San Diego put major safeguards in place, including the independent Audit Committee, a stronger independent City Auditor, tighter budget, reserve and debt policies, stronger pension oversight, more rigorous financial disclosure rules, and greater transparency and public reporting.

So, the City operates today with far more financial oversight, audits, checks and reporting requirements than existed during that era.

I think those safeguards would make a City Manager form of government even stronger today than it was in the past because

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‘We Rarely Talk of Why the Public Coast Is Disappearing’ — So, Attend the Peninsula Planning Board Meeting on NAVWAR Tonight, Thurs., June 18

 Source  June 18, 2026  3 Comments on ‘We Rarely Talk of Why the Public Coast Is Disappearing’ — So, Attend the Peninsula Planning Board Meeting on NAVWAR Tonight, Thurs., June 18

By John McNab

We rarely talk context of why the public coast is disappearing and high rises are sprouting up everywhere.  The below is a perspective on going from freeing animals to caging humans – San Diego’s shift in priorities

A black-and-white movie on TV in the early 60’s was about a boy who went to the zoo with his grandfather. Upon seeing the animals in cages, he broke down. Likely because he loved to spend time under the warm sun playing in the canyons with the lizard and birds. Seeing the zoo animals poorly treated broke his heart.

Upon getting home, he was still in tears. It was recommended he did something. So he started protesting at the zoo. The editor at the local paper thought the story was cute and ran a piece on the boy and his protest. It struck a nerve and suddenly citizens were up in arms. So the embarrassed zoo changed. The last scene, in Technicolor, was the front of the San Diego zoo.

Yet what could be a sequel to the story?

A mother had many errands to run so she dropped off her son with his grandfather. The son, full of energy, got on the grandfather’s nerves. “Why don’t you go outside and play?” The boy answered in tears, “there’s nowhere outside to play”.

Continue Reading ‘We Rarely Talk of Why the Public Coast Is Disappearing’ — So, Attend the Peninsula Planning Board Meeting on NAVWAR Tonight, Thurs., June 18

5 Things You Didn’t Know About Little Italy in San Diego

 Source  June 17, 2026  3 Comments on 5 Things You Didn’t Know About Little Italy in San Diego

By Debbie L. Sklar

Little Italy today is one of San Diego’s most visible dining and residential districts, but much of what people see now sits on top of a far more industrial and working-class
waterfront history. The neighborhood’s transformation didn’t happen all at once, and many layers of its earlier identity are still embedded in the streets, buildings, and public spaces that remain.

Here are five things you might not know.

1. It was once a major tuna processing hub

Before restaurants and redevelopment, this area was closely tied to San Diego’s tuna industry. Italian immigrant families were central to fishing, canning, and dockside work along the waterfront. The neighborhood functioned as part of a larger working harbor economy, where industrial labor defined daily life far more than residential or
commercial activity.

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SDG&E Wants 8.6% Rate Increase; Consumer Advocates and City Council Scramble to Oppose It

 Frank Gormlie  June 17, 2026  5 Comments on SDG&E Wants 8.65 Rate Increase; Consumer Advocates and City Council Scramble to Oppose It

San Diego Gas & Electric has just formally requested an 8.6% rate increase with the California Public Utilities Commission. SDG&E wants it to begin in 2028.

The utility seeks approximately $3.8 billion for 2028, including about $2.9 billion for electric operations and $900 million for natural gas service. If the CPUC approves their request, “SDG&E estimates the increase would add roughly $14.03 per month to the average residential electric bill and $8.45 per month to the average residential gas bill compared to 2027 rates,” reports CBS8. That’s a combined $22.48 to the average monthly bill, reports the OB Rag.

The filing by San Diego’s for-profit utility, launches “what is expected to be an 18-month review process before state regulators determine whether to approve, modify or reject the proposal,” says CBS8/

Meanwhile, the San Diego City Council on Tuesday, June 16th, voted to endorse 10 bills in the state legislature aimed at lowering electricity rates and making investor-owned utilities more accountable to ratepayers, reports KPBS.

Continue Reading SDG&E Wants 8.6% Rate Increase; Consumer Advocates and City Council Scramble to Oppose It

City of San Diego’s Decision on Midway Rising Delayed … Again

 Frank Gormlie  June 17, 2026  4 Comments on City of San Diego’s Decision on Midway Rising Delayed … Again

The U-T this morning announced that the City of San Diego has “quietly” pushed back its decision on Midway Rising, the massive 50-acre redevelopment project slated for the Sports Arena area until “an unknown date later in the year.”

As UT reporter Jenifer van Grove mused, the project has been “promised for May and then June,” and now pushed back even more. She wrote:

The City Council’s Land Use & Housing Committee is not slated to hear the item before the council’s summer legislative recess, Councilmember Kent Lee, who chairs the committee, told the Union-Tribune.

Continue Reading City of San Diego’s Decision on Midway Rising Delayed … Again

Clairemont Residents Up Ante With Fight Against ADUs With New Signs

 Frank Gormlie  June 17, 2026  4 Comments on Clairemont Residents Up Ante With Fight Against ADUs With New Signs

Last week, we posted an article about anti-short term rentals stickers being plastered around north OB.

Now, we find residents of Clairemont have done one better against the ADUs that have clobbered their community over the last couple of years. (See above)

Go here to see the photos of the small professionally made and anonymous signs that have popped up in the Clairemont Mesa area.:

Continue Reading Clairemont Residents Up Ante With Fight Against ADUs With New Signs