Bill Would Create ‘State Surfing Reserves’ in California

 Source  April 8, 2026  1 Comment on Bill Would Create ‘State Surfing Reserves’ in California

By Save the WavesApril 7, 2026

For several months, Save The Waves has been working hand-in-hand with Assemblymember Jacqui Irwin (D-42 District) to introduce and pass a bill that would help establish ‘Surfing Reserves’ along the California coastline.

The goal is to provide a framework that will advocate for and help protect California’s 300-plus surf breaks and surf ecosystems.

“California has led the way in ocean conservation, but we need to do more to protect our iconic surf breaks. Saves The Waves has done tremendous work to elevate the importance of surf reserves, and I am excited to bring these designations to the state-level,” said Irwin.

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What Did City’s $100M Favor to San Diego Unified Get It? A Stab in the Back

 Kate Callen  April 8, 2026  0 Comments on What Did City’s $100M Favor to San Diego Unified Get It? A Stab in the Back

By Hal Valderhaug / Union-Tribune Commentary / April 5, 2026

On Oct. 8, 2021, with the support of Mayor Todd Gloria, the City Council voted unanimously to lease 34 acres of Balboa Park, conservatively valued at $100 million or more, for a term of 99 years to the San Diego Unified School District in exchange for two district parcels — an 11.73-acre site in Tierrasanta and a 0.39-acre site already in use by the city for the Logan Memorial Pool.

This was an enormous favor to the school district, considering the prime parkland location. Current members Joe LaCava, Jennifer Campbell, Stephen Whitburn, Marni von Wilpert, Raul Campillo, Vivian Moreno and Sean Elo-Rivera all voted to allow the district to continue using the site for San Diego High School and Balboa Stadium on the most favorable terms possible.

I was a deputy city attorney for 25 years who advised the city property department, which oversees more than 500 leases. In all that time, not once was I asked to approve a deal this outrageous. As I wrote in 2019 when it was being negotiated, “No competent real estate lawyer would advise the owner of land to lease it for such a long term. Conditions change over time, and no knowledgeable person would give up control of a parcel of extremely valuable property for 99 years.”

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Loop-de-Loo Kids’ Clothing Resale Shop Opens Along Voltaire in Point Loma Heights

 Source  April 8, 2026  2 Comments on Loop-de-Loo Kids’ Clothing Resale Shop Opens Along Voltaire in Point Loma Heights

By Dave Schwab / Peninsula Beacon / March 31, 2026

Named for a family sing-along, Loop-de-Loo’s children’s resale shop off Voltaire Street in Point Loma offers exceptional deals on gently used clothing at affordable prices.

With a healthcare background as a nurse, Lindsay Rutherford, the daughter of one of the principals in HGW Architecture in Ocean Beach on Bacon Street, has embarked on a new career as proprietor of the newly opened children’s resale shop.

Needing resale children’s clothing herself is one reason Rutherford opened Loop-de-Loo’s at 4030 Wabaska Drive in Point Loma Heights, which carries children’s clothing and shoes, sizes newborn to 14, along with toys, books, and some baby gear.

With three children of her own, Rutherford knows just how fast they grow and how keeping them clothed is a constant challenge.

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30th Street Bike Lane Data: Who Do You Trust?

 Kate Callen  April 7, 2026  38 Comments on 30th Street Bike Lane Data: Who Do You Trust?

By Kate Callen / April 7, 2026

The 1933 movie Duck Soup added a wicked line to the comedy lexicon when a sly Chico Marx asked a flummoxed Margaret Dumont, “Who ya gonna believe, me or your own eyes?”

That quip, used by comics ever since, has become a running joke in North Park since the 30th Street Bike Lanes were installed in 2021 as part of a $30-million pipeline project.

For five years now, North Park residents have ridiculed the empty bike lanes. When my friends and I have coffee at a 30th Street sidewalk cafe, and an occasional cyclist whizzes by, we nudge one another and say, “Hey, look, there’s a bike in the bike lane!”

We live in a city where elected officials sell out neighborhoods to serve the interests of developer-backed “climate action” lobbyists. So we expect politicians and their cronies to treat us with insolence.

But sometimes their con jobs cross the line from absurdity into all-out farce.

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Opponents of “Empty Homes Tax” Point to SF Court Loss

 Source  April 7, 2026  4 Comments on Opponents of “Empty Homes Tax” Point to SF Court Loss

By Cody Delaney / inewsource / April 6, 2026

Opponents of San Diego’s proposed empty homes tax are sounding the alarms, warning that the ballot measure is nearly identical to a tax that was struck down and ruled unconstitutional not long ago.

They’re referring to a case in San Francisco, where voters passed a similar initiative by a narrow margin in 2022. Officials there stopped collecting the tax two years later as they appeal the court’s decision.

But that hasn’t stopped San Diego officials from bringing the question to voters in June: Should property owners who intentionally keep homes empty and off the market during a housing shortage be required to pay an additional tax worth thousands of dollars a year?

It’s a question that has divided San Diegans in recent months, from renters to property owners and businesses to union representatives. And it comes at a time when limited housing supply has kept rents high for years — in a region where more people fall into homelessness for the first time than leave the streets for housing.

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The Surreal Mural on the Template in Ocean Beach

 Source  April 7, 2026  1 Comment on The Surreal Mural on the Template in Ocean Beach

The surreal mural on the east side of the Template in OB has gotten some attention. Richard Schulte runs a photo-dominant blog called cool san diego sights and recently shared a series of pics of the mural.

Signatures by the artists appear to be MURALIS, ART BY SOUP, EATHDUST, HAILYBROUS, JORDINDAVID, and SOURCE!

Here are Shulte’s pics, including details:

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City of San Diego: ‘You Want Your Sidewalk Repaired? Got 8 Years?’ Backlog for Repairs Grows

 Frank Gormlie  April 7, 2026  0 Comments on City of San Diego: ‘You Want Your Sidewalk Repaired? Got 8 Years?’ Backlog for Repairs Grows

By David Garrick / San Diego Union-Tribune / March 28, 2026

San Diego’s budget crisis is expanding already-long backlogs for streetlight repairs, sidewalk fixes, graffiti removal and requests for stop signs and speed bumps — and things are expected to get even worse.

The backlogs have been sharply on the rise because budget cuts last July limited overtime hours in the Transportation Department and filling vacancies with new hires has been essentially prohibited since December.

And a $120 million deficit the city faces in the new budget for fiscal 2027 is expected to require across-the-board cuts instead of the $55 million funding increase transportation officials say is needed to shrink the backlogs.

The quality of city roads is also in jeopardy. Transportation officials say $248 million per year is needed to get city roads up to national standards, but San Diego now spends about one-third of that with no increases likely.

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Community Coalition Bulletin: This Week at City Hall — April 6-10, 2026

 Source  April 6, 2026  2 Comments on Community Coalition Bulletin: This Week at City Hall — April 6-10, 2026

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

Monday, April 6: City Council, 2:00 p.m.

Agenda

Item 251: Propositions for the November 3, 2026 Ballot Forwarded for 2nd Committee Review

Why it matters: Two of the five measures under review seek changes related to how the Transient Occupancy Tax applies to online travel companies. The other three would establish free parking at city beaches and bays (Campillo), remove term limits for the City Auditor (Lee), and reform campaign finance and ethics laws (Elo-Rivera).

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Race for Issa’s Seat: Desmond Is a ‘Formidable Opponent’

 Source  April 6, 2026  0 Comments on Race for Issa’s Seat: Desmond Is a ‘Formidable Opponent’

By Nadia Lathan and Deborah Brenner / Cal-Matters / April 6, 2026

When Republican Rep. Darrell Issa quit his reelection campaign last month, Democrats celebrated. Now, some are worried.

Issa’s exit is seen as a mixed blessing among Democratic officials who have eyed flipping his San Diego House seat for years. While demonstrators at a No Kings rally last weekend were exultant to see him leave the race, local Democratic organizers are more guarded. The Republican who took his place, San Diego County Supervisor Jim Desmond, is a longtime local official with name recognition, fundraising connections and community relationships — without Issa’s close ties to President Donald Trump.

“If anything, Jim Desmond is a slightly better candidate than Darrell Issa in some regards,” because he is not as closely affiliated with Trump, said Dan Rottenstreich, a spokesperson for Marni von Wilpert, one of two leading Democrats in the race.

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‘San Diego Surf Heroes Going Back to 1910 — When Duke Kahanamoku Tried the OB Pier.’

 Source  April 6, 2026  0 Comments on ‘San Diego Surf Heroes Going Back to 1910 — When Duke Kahanamoku Tried the OB Pier.’

Twenty years ago, the San Diego Reader ran a long cover story called “90 Years of Curl,” an in-depth review of surfing history, particularly in San Diego, written by Jeannette DeWyze.

Then this year on March 30, the online version of the Reader republished it as “San Diego surf heroes going back to 1910 — When Duke Kahanamoku tried the OB Pier.”

[What OB Pier would that be? The one that is permanently closed right now was opened in 1966. There was another pier built earlier – south of where the 66 pier is.]

This story first appeared in the Reader on December 14, 2006.

There’s a good chance Ralph Noisat caught the first wave in San Diego. He died in 1980, and as he wasn’t a man to brag, his pioneering role might have been lost were it not for his board. He made it himself when he was a boy, and it was still in the Noisat family home in 1998 when Ralph’s daughter, Margie Chamberlain, was preparing to sell the Mission Hills residence. Chamberlain realized the heavy wooden board might have historic value, so she called the California Surf Museum in Oceanside. No one there knew anything about Noisat, but the museum staff was thrilled to accept the board when they heard what Chamberlain had to say about her father.

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June Primary: 4 Democrats Vie for District 8 Seat on San Diego City Council

 Source  April 6, 2026  0 Comments on June Primary: 4 Democrats Vie for District 8 Seat on San Diego City Council

By David Garrick / San Diego Union-Tribune / April 3, 2026

Four candidates seeking to represent San Diego’s South Bay on the City Council would bring to City Hall contrasting types of experience, different priorities and varied solutions to the city’s budget crisis.

Their battle is viewed as so wide open with just over eight weeks till the June 2 primary that the county Democratic Party declared each of the four candidates — all Democrats — qualified but declined to pick one. The winner of a November runoff between the top two finishers in June will replace termed-out Vivian Moreno as representative for the district, which includes Logan Heights, Sherman Heights, Otay Mesa and San Ysidro.

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More Photos from San Diego’s No Kings — A Week Later

 Source  April 4, 2026  2 Comments on More Photos from San Diego’s No Kings — A Week Later

Here are samples of photos sent to us last weekend, too late for the live-blog (that shut down about 5:30 pm after beginning at 8:15 in the morning) that we now would like to share.

Downtown San Diego — Waterfront Park

From Change Begins With ME .Indivisible.

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