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Non-Profit Gears Up Funding Drive to Take Over Palomar State Park Before It Closes

 Source  January 17, 2012  3 Comments on Non-Profit Gears Up Funding Drive to Take Over Palomar State Park Before It Closes

By J. Harry Jones/ U-T San Diego / January 17, 2012

PALOMAR MOUNTAIN — A nonprofit citizen’s group hoping to save Palomar Mountain State Park from permanent closure this summer has mounted a pledge drive with the goal of raising $60,000 annually.

Last month the Friends of Palomar Mountain State Park Committee submitted a proposal to the Department of State Parks offering a straightforward deal: If they’ll keep Palomar open, the committee will cover the deficit between revenue and operating costs from public donations.

The park is one of 70 parks slated for permanent closure this July and already all the campgrounds have been shuttered. Rick Barclay, chairman of the committee, said the park isn’t self-sufficient, meaning revenue doesn’t cover expenses, even after the operating budget’s been slashed to the bone.

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Divers Remove Abandoned Fishing Gear That Threatens Marine Life Off Point Loma

 Source  January 17, 2012  1 Comment on Divers Remove Abandoned Fishing Gear That Threatens Marine Life Off Point Loma

Ocean Defenders Alliance Says Abandoned Fishing Nets Threaten Marine Life

By 10News.com / January 17, 2012

SAN DIEGO — A team of scuba divers on Monday worked to remove hundreds of pounds of abandoned fishing gear off the coast of San Diego that was threatening sea life.

The mission of the Ocean Defenders Alliance is to clean and protect coastal waters from “ghost gear,” or leftover commercial fishing equipment, such as nets.

These nets are killing all the time,” said Kurt Lieber, who is with the Ocean Defenders Alliance. “Even today, they released some fish from it to live another day.”

On Monday, Lieber and volunteers from Ocean Defenders Alliance removed about 400 pounds of commercial fishing nets about two miles south of the Point Loma marina.

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Highlights of “Pay to Play” San Diego Mayoral Debate

 Source  January 16, 2012  7 Comments on Highlights of “Pay to Play” San Diego Mayoral Debate

Candidates Differ on treating Occupy protesters and whether they’d retain Police Chief Lansdowne.

Editor: Last Friday the 13th of January, the four major candidates for San Diego mayor held a debate. It was the very first time that all four major candidates appeared on the stage together as Bonnie Dumanis and DeMaio had been avoiding earlier debate opportunities (they both declined to attend the debate held by the San Diego Labor Council in November of 2011). But it was a debate – held at the Grant Hotel – that was a ‘pay for play’ debate, as it charged an entry fee. This meant, of course, that ordinary San Diego citizens and voters weren’t there.

So, to remedy that, here are two versions of the debate to consider, the first from the Daily Transcript and the other from the U-T:

Four mayoral candidates spar over plans and policies

By Claire Trageser / The Daily Transcript / January 14, 2012

All four major San Diego mayoral candidates squared off in a debate for the first time Friday, answering pointed questions from members of the local media about their plans and policies.

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San Diego City Council Should Okay Citizen’s Petition to Publicly Fund Elections

 Source  January 16, 2012  0 Comments on San Diego City Council Should Okay Citizen’s Petition to Publicly Fund Elections

By Nadin Abbott / East County Magazine / Jan. 15, 2012

On Thursday January 11th, 2012 Mr. Derek Casady of La Jolla brought a proposal for the June Ballot allowing for voluntary public financing of elections in the City of San Diego. We are just starting to see the toxic effects of the Citizens United Supreme Court Decision on our democracy. In that decision, the Supreme Court ruled that corporations could pour virtually unlimited amounts into funding campaigns for candidates and political initiatives, opening wide the floodgates for corruption and undue influence on public officials.

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Public Utilities Commission Rolls Out New Fire Prevention Rules

 Source  January 16, 2012  0 Comments on Public Utilities Commission Rolls Out New Fire Prevention Rules
by Lucas O’Connor / Two Cathedrals / Originally Posted on Jan. 13, 2012

The California Public Utilities Commission unveiled new rules this week — reacting to lessons of the 2007 wildfires to toughen regulations that hopefully will prevent power lines from starting fires in the future. The rules are welcome, since otherwise SDG&E was under absolutely no obligation to change its practices — the practices that started the Witch Creek fire.

Arcing power lines, buffeted by Santa Ana winds, were blamed by investigators for the Oct. 21, 2007, Witch Creek fire. Ignited near Santa Ysabel, that fire eventually merged with the Guejito fire, which had begun early Oct. 22 in the San Pasqual Valley and quickly burned into Rancho Bernardo. More than 1,600 structures were lost in the fires.


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What really happened when the San Diego Occupiers got kicked off the Greyhound bus in Amarillo, Texas.

 Source  January 15, 2012  111 Comments on What really happened when the San Diego Occupiers got kicked off the Greyhound bus in Amarillo, Texas.

Occupy San Diego Road to Congress – Update Day 2

From Las Crusas to the Amarillo 13

By Eugene Davidovich/Special to the OB Rag / January 15, 2011

With no breaks from the road all night, and after traveling hundreds of miles through California and Arizona, the group of activists from Opccupy San Diego finally got a chance to stretch their legs in Las Cruces, New Mexico in the early hours of Saturday, January 14th.

When the bus pulled into the Las Cruses station at 7:30am, everyone’s hopes for a working restroom were shattered as the sign on the door read, “Restroom Not Operational.”

To add to the difficulties, weather outdoors was a crisp 30 degrees Fahrenheit, a sharp change form the relatively blazing 70 degrees most protesters are used to in San Diego.

At the Las Cruses Greyhound station the group was met by Jeff and Stella Miller from Occupy Las Cruces who brought loafs of freshly baked hot bread and coffee for the travelers. After everyone got their fill and had an opportunity to stretch, the group quickly organized a small rally with protest signs and chants outside the bus station.

Continue Reading What really happened when the San Diego Occupiers got kicked off the Greyhound bus in Amarillo, Texas.

No, SOPA PIPA is not that tasty, Latin pastry you love. It’s the death of the Internet.

 Source  January 15, 2012  0 Comments on No, SOPA PIPA is not that tasty, Latin pastry you love. It’s the death of the Internet.

by William Gagan/ San Diego Occupy Press / Originally published on January 10, 2012

The Protect IP Act (PIPA) is a U.S. Senate bill introduced by Senator Patrick Leahy. Along with its House counterpart Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), the bills are designed to provide the government and copyright holders with powers to block access to “rogue websites dedicated to infringing or counterfeit goods,” especially those registered outside the United States. Since its introduction on May 11th, 2011, the proposed bill has been met by opposition from various digital rights activists and bloggers for its encroachment in online activities protected under the first amendment of free speech. Congressional hearings for both bills began on November 16th.

Background

If passed by Congress, Protect IP Act would allow the government to curb public access to websites that have “no significant use” other than infringing copyright, enabling or facilitating copyright infringement. It would also make unauthorized media streaming an act of felony and hold the web publishers and hosting services responsible for curbing their users from posting copyright-infringed content.

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Suspected Beach Car Burgler Caught in La Mesa

 Source  January 14, 2012  2 Comments on Suspected Beach Car Burgler Caught in La Mesa

Thief Struck in Ocean Beach – Would Watch Where Beachgoers Would Hide Car Keys

by Lori Weisberg / San Diego U-T / January 14, 2012

A man who San Diego police believe was connected to a string of mostly beach-area car burglaries last year was arrested on Friday at a La Mesa motel.

The thefts, which occurred in Ocean Beach, Pacific Beach, downtown San Diego and La Mesa between August and December of last year, generally targeted beach-goers, police said.

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Occupy San Diego Activists On Road to “Occupy Congress”

 Source  January 14, 2012  15 Comments on Occupy San Diego Activists On Road to “Occupy Congress”

Preparations and Departure – Day 1 Update

Editor: Over a dozen activists from Occupy San Diego are going to Washington, DC, in response to a “call” to “Occupy DC” and Occupy Congress, which is to begin on January 17th, when Congress officially returns. About a dozen of these activists are traveling by Greyhound – and this is the first of many reports by our special OB Rag reporter for the trip, Eugene Davidovich – an OBcean. Other OSD folks are also heading to DC but later this month. Eugene will be sending us periodic reports on this historic 3000 mile journey and about what they find and do in the nation’s capital.

By Eugene Davidovich / Special to the OB Rag / January 14, 2012

On a sunny San Diego Friday afternoon, January 13 2012, a group of eleven dedicated and passionate activists from Occupy San Diego (OSD) embarked on a historic journey by bus, from the West Coast to Washington D.C.

The purpose; to stand in solidarity with a call from the D.C. Occupation for a mass convergence on Congress January 17th. A convergence of all occupations from across the nation to stand in solidarity and speak loudly for social and economic justice.

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A Tail From Ocean Beach’s Past: “The O.B. Ranger Rides Again!”

 Source  January 13, 2012  4 Comments on A Tail From Ocean Beach’s Past: “The O.B. Ranger Rides Again!”

Local Radio Heralded Counter-Cultural Seventies Series Called “The O.B. Ranger Rides Again!”

Editor: We received this article from Jay Allen Sanford, who has been a San Diego Reader columnist and cartoonist (Overheard in San Diego, etc) for around 20 years. Sanford lived on Abbott Street in the late ’70s and early ’80s, and his first professional cartoons (ie paid) were for OB’s Strand Theater ads and newsletters (he’s working on a lengthy Strand article now).

By Jay Allen Sanford

“We were going after the progressive rock or the album rock crowd,” says radio DJ and programming vet Gary Allyn about his early seventies on-air gig in San Diego.

“We wanted an independent attitude of not giving a damn about anything because we could get away with a lot of that in Mexico. So our IDs and buffers had things you couldn’t say on American radio. We did quasi drug references. Like ‘It’s time for the scores’ – and the scores would be ‘four keys, two lids.’ With stuff like the O.B. Ranger routines, there was always that underground go-against-society undercurrent. Of course O.B. was the center of the hippie movement in that period, flower power and the drug culture and all that.”

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America Isn’t a Corporation

 Source  January 13, 2012  2 Comments on America Isn’t a Corporation

By Paul Krugman / New York Times / January 12, 2012

“And greed — you mark my words — will not only save Teldar Paper, but that other malfunctioning corporation called the U.S.A.”

That’s how the fictional Gordon Gekko finished his famous “Greed is good” speech in the 1987 film “Wall Street.” In the movie, Gekko got his comeuppance. But in real life, Gekkoism triumphed, and policy based on the notion that greed is good is a major reason why income has grown so much more rapidly for the richest 1 percent than for the middle class.

Today, however, let’s focus on the rest of that sentence, which compares America to a corporation. This, too, is an idea that has been widely accepted. And it’s the main plank of Mitt Romney’s case that he should be president: In effect, he is asserting that what we need to fix our ailing economy is someone who has been successful in business.

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Memorial Held for Active Duty Army Sergeant and Occupy San Diego Activist

 Source  January 13, 2012  3 Comments on Memorial Held for Active Duty Army Sergeant and Occupy San Diego Activist

By Nadin Abbott / East County Magazine / Jan. 12, 2012

January 12, 2012 (San Diego)—U.S. Army Master Sergeant Jay Polk has reportedly been killed overseas while on active duty with U.S. special forces, according to friends and family in San Diego, where he had been living recently.

During a candlelight memorial service held this evening at the Civic Center Plaza, one mourner observed, “Jay was a Cavalryman, he was a Master Sergeant, and he knew how to take care of people.” The service was attended by local veterans, occupy members, and friends of the fallen soldier.

Word of Polk’s death came as a shock to local members of Occupy San Diego, where Polk was known as “Chef” from the early days, helping to prepare and serve 500 to 1,000 meals a day for homeless people and Occupy members—anyone who needed a meal.

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