Category: Economy

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?

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.

Continue Reading Midway Homeless Shelter Caught Up in Dispute Between City and County

Robert Reich: Here are 10 things you need to know about Trump’s big ugly bill

 Source  May 23, 2025  2 Comments on Robert Reich: Here are 10 things you need to know about Trump’s big ugly bill

By Robert Reich / AlterNet / May 22, 2025

The old professor in me thinks the best way to convey to you how utterly awful the so-called “one big beautiful bill” passed by the House last night, May 22, actually is would be to give you this short ten-question exam. (Answers are in parenthesis, but first try to answer without looking at them.)

1. Does the House’s “one big beautiful bill” cut Medicare? (Answer: Yes, by an estimated $500 billion.)

2. Because the bill cuts Medicaid, how many Americans are expected to lose Medicaid coverage? (At least 8.6 million.)

3. Will the tax cut in the bill benefit the rich or the poor or everyone?(Overwhelmingly, the rich.)

Continue Reading Robert Reich: Here are 10 things you need to know about Trump’s big ugly bill

San Diego U-T Editorial Board: ‘Has Mayor Gloria Jumped the Shark With Latest Ambulance Story?’

 Source  May 23, 2025  1 Comment on San Diego U-T Editorial Board: ‘Has Mayor Gloria Jumped the Shark With Latest Ambulance Story?’

San Diego U-T Editorial Board / May 23, 2025

Has San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria jumped the shark, to use the snarky phrase coined in the wake of a particularly ridiculous 1977 episode of the TV sitcom “Happy Days”? The possibility leapt to mind this week after one of the most confounding front-page stories in U-T history.

Here’s the background needed to appreciate this description: For decades, city voters have recognized the problem of compensation costs eating up the budget and crowding out needed services.

It’s why they decisively approved a charter amendment in 2006 that permitted the city to use independent contractors for services if they could do so more efficiently than city workers. It’s why they gave landslide approval to a ballot measure in 2012 ending costly defined-benefit pensions for most newly hired city employees. That the first measure was mostly ignored by elected city leaders and that the second measure was thrown out on narrow legal grounds didn’t invalidate what their passage said about voters’ wishes.

Meanwhile, the voters’ wisdom in trying to check pension costs has been repeatedly confirmed. In March, San Diego’s pension board unanimously approved a staggering $533.2 million annual pension payment for the city for the fiscal year beginning July 1. It was $44 million higher than the previous annual payment and $35 million higher than the pension system’s actuary forecast in 2024.

Continue Reading San Diego U-T Editorial Board: ‘Has Mayor Gloria Jumped the Shark With Latest Ambulance Story?’

What’s Going On With the Historic Cottages Next to Point Loma Nazarene University?

 Staff  May 22, 2025  15 Comments on What’s Going On With the Historic Cottages Next to Point Loma Nazarene University?

By Geoff Page

The only way to access the site of the “cottages” is by turning west off Catalina Blvd. onto Lomaland Drive and driving onto the Nazarene University campus. Just past the intersection of Lomaland Drive and Lomaland Drive – yes there is such an intersection – is a dirt road to the west that is easy to miss.

The four units are on the west side of the dirt road, facing Sunset Cliffs Park below. At the end of the short road are Units #4 and #3.

Unit #4 is a very small building, only 400 square feet according the to the tenants in Unit #3. Unit #3 is a small one-bedroom place next to it. Unit #2 has been empty for 18 years and it looks like it. Unit #1 is referred to as the Corbin House. Unlike the other three, Unit #1 is a substantial house, inhabited, but also in a state of disrepair. This is the house proponents are pushing for historical designation.

The retired couple renting Unit #3 were home and happy to talk about what was happening. Joe and Debbie Corr’s house is small, a one-bedroom. The living room has a spectacular wide view – what some might call a million-dollar view – of the Pacific Ocean below. There is a small deck outside the living room window. The house is mostly wood and concrete block, clearly old.

Continue Reading What’s Going On With the Historic Cottages Next to Point Loma Nazarene University?

A City Budget Is a Moral Document

 Source  May 21, 2025  3 Comments on A City Budget Is a Moral Document

By Francine Maxwell / May 20, 2025

I am a San Diego resident, a taxpayer, and somebody who still believes this city belongs to the people. This is my request to the City Council as it tries to navigate our financial crisis.

Let’s be clear: the Mayor has done his job. He proposed a draft budget to close a $258-million deficit. If you don’t like it — and I don’t — your job is to propose something better. The people of San Diego didn’t elect nine Councilmembers to rubber-stamp bad ideas. They elected you to lead.

This budget is a moral document. And what it says right now is: The City values bureaucracy over neighborhoods. It protects middle management and redundant executive positions while gutting services our communities rely on. Five-day library service? Parks losing a third of their programming hours? And residents paying for it through $47 trash fees, water rate hikes, $2.50-an-hour parking meters, and who knows what next?

Continue Reading A City Budget Is a Moral Document

San Diego Budget Crisis: Cut Positions, Not Programs

 Source  May 21, 2025  9 Comments on San Diego Budget Crisis: Cut Positions, Not Programs

By Paul Krueger / May 21, 2025

I listened politely, and with compassion, as speaker after speaker at the San Diego City Council’s May 19 Public Budget Forum pleaded, begged, and demanded that the Mayor and the Council protect our libraries, parks and rec centers.

I totally agreed with all the advocates. But it was Francine Maxwell’s comments that best expressed my position on how to balance the city’s budget. And that’s why I used my one-minute public comment to urge the Council to follow her sage advice.

Francine’s powerful presentation is posted here. I will summarize it in a few words: “Cut positions, not programs.”

Continue Reading San Diego Budget Crisis: Cut Positions, Not Programs

Open Letter to City Council on the Budget

 Source  May 17, 2025  3 Comments on Open Letter to City Council on the Budget

By Jim Varnadore / May 17, 2025

You’re in the short rows with the FY-26 budget, and it still isn’t balanced.  There are some things you can do to help the budget without harming your constituents.

You should remove bike lanes from the FY-26 budget.  Bike lanes are miles and miles of nothing but miles and miles – a genuine waste of money. In the most recent 3,000+ miles I’ve driven around San Diego from San Pasqual to San Ysidro, no bicycle was present in any bike lane anywhere in the city.

Continue Reading Open Letter to City Council on the Budget

Under Intense Community Pushback, Majority on City Council Committee Vote to Limit ADUs in San Diego

 Source  May 16, 2025  2 Comments on Under Intense Community Pushback, Majority on City Council Committee Vote to Limit ADUs in San Diego

Proposed Limits Head to Full Council Vote in Early June

By David Garrick / San Diego Union-Tribune / May 16, 2025

San Diego City Council members endorsed major changes Thursday to a controversial city incentive for backyard apartments, including a proposal to limit the number per property.

The goal of setting a maximum is to prevent developers from drastically altering the character of single-family neighborhoods by manipulating the city’s incentive so they can build dozens of backyard apartments on one lot.

In addition to capping the number of backyard apartments per lot, the council’s Land Use and Housing Committee voted 3-1 to force people who build such units to pay infrastructure fees and to require parking for those that aren’t near transit.

The proposal also requires greater distances from property lines, limits backyard apartments to two stories and prohibits them on cul-de-sacs in areas with high wildfire risk.

The proposed changes now head to the full council in early June for final approval. Planning Director Heidi Vonblum said they could take effect as soon as late July, shrinking the window for outlier projects.

Continue Reading Under Intense Community Pushback, Majority on City Council Committee Vote to Limit ADUs in San Diego

North Star Homes — the New Owner of Cañon Street Marine Center –‘Is Playing Monopoly With People’s Lives’

 Source  May 13, 2025  0 Comments on North Star Homes — the New Owner of Cañon Street Marine Center –‘Is Playing Monopoly With People’s Lives’

By Tyler Faurot / Pt Loma-OB Monthly SDU-T / May 9, 2025

Following its acquisition in March by North Star Homes LP, some businesses at Point Loma’s Cañon Street Marine Center have closed or moved, with those that remain left in “limbo.”

The Marine Center includes two adjacent properties at 2810-2832 Cañon St. and 1101-1111 Scott St. At the time of the sale, the property was fully leased to nine tenants, and commercial real estate firm Intersection, which represented the seller, Cañon Street Properties, boasted the center had gone eight years with no tenant turnover.

But nearly two months into the new ownership, some businesses already have closed or relocated — though North Star Homes, which owns and operates other retail properties in San Diego County, plans to hold the Marine Center as a long-term investment and is expected to maintain it as a commercial center, according to Intersection and Strom Commercial, which represented North Star Homes in the purchase.

The catch is in the rent.

Continue Reading North Star Homes — the New Owner of Cañon Street Marine Center –‘Is Playing Monopoly With People’s Lives’

A Rare Moment Makes History: The Meeting of Community Leaders From Across San Diego

 Staff  May 12, 2025  3 Comments on A Rare Moment Makes History: The Meeting of Community Leaders From Across San Diego

In the end, there were forty-five activists and leaders from communities all over San Diego, and they held a truly historic meeting this past Saturday, May 10. It was and is a rare moment, a moment when that many neighborhood leaders and people active in their community meet together in one room with their own agenda — and without the presence of some governmental board, agency or council.

The beautiful and vintage Point Loma Assembly Hall — over one hundred years old –was the venue for this historic occasion. Hosted by folks from Protect Point Loma who provided the hall and pizza, there were brief welcomes and introductions from Frank G and Kate C of the coordinating committee. Then there was a dramatic moment — a roll call of the communities and hands shot up after each neighborhood was named. From Bay Ho to Encanto, from University City to Linda Vista, Ocean Beach to Mira Mesa, Middletown to Clairemont. La Jolla and Point Loma.

As people settled in, Kate C gave a special shout-out to two groups: to SOHO, Save Our Heritage Organization and to Neighbors for a Better San Diego, both of whom had done needed and crucial spadework on the issues for years.

Frank G then explained that the coalition was actually a coalition of community leaders — that hopefully some day would be a coalition of all the different neighborhood groups themselves — a direction the current network is moving. He said there’s at least two types of leadership. There’s one that shows by example and gets up to the top of the hill. Another is a type of leadership that gets to the top of the hill but takes everyone else with them. People nodded their heads and murmured in acquiescence. And the coalition, he said, needs that type of leadership right now.

Kate spoke of the three Planning Commissioners who back on May 1st were bold enough to just not go along with Mayor Gloria’s so-called ADU reforms, coming up with restrictions in number, height, set-backs, parking and adequate evacuation routes.

Continue Reading A Rare Moment Makes History: The Meeting of Community Leaders From Across San Diego

Newest Local Assemblymember: ‘We Need More Single-Family Homes in Southeastern San Diego’

 Source  May 12, 2025  2 Comments on Newest Local Assemblymember: ‘We Need More Single-Family Homes in Southeastern San Diego’

First term Assemblymember LaShae Sharp-Collins wants to build homes and rebuild social safety nets in California and in her district

by Deborah Sullivan Brennan / Voice of San Diego / May 9, 2025

First term Assemblymember LaShae Sharp-Collins wants to build homes and rebuild social safety nets in California and in her district in southeastern San Diego.

Sharp-Collins was elected in November, replacing former Assemblymember Akilah Weber Pierson, who was elected to the state Senate. I sat down with Sharp-Collins last week to discuss her priorities for the 79th District, which includes La Mesa, Lemon Grove and parts of the city of San Diego.

The district skews heavily blue, with twice as many Democratic registered voters as Republicans, according to the San Diego County Registrar of Voters. Its population is about 43 percent Latino, 27 percent White, 13 percent Asian and 11 percent Black.

“This is the most diverse district, in my personal opinion,” she said. “I’m born and raised here. I love it.”

Continue Reading Newest Local Assemblymember: ‘We Need More Single-Family Homes in Southeastern San Diego’