One of the Most Dangerous Jobs in OB
Think you have a dangerous job?
Check this poor soul working his machine on Sunset Cliffs.
Serving OB, the Peninsula and San Diego Beaches

Think you have a dangerous job?
Check this poor soul working his machine on Sunset Cliffs.
An estimated one thousand residents from Point Loma jammed the FAA meeting last night, Tuesday Oct. 6th, in Liberty Station and many sounded off about the proposed new flight paths.
The proposed changes will – in all likelihood – bring east-bound planes that take off west over Point Loma close to or even over the Peninsula.
The current flight path has jets – once they take off over the Peninsula (including OB where it’s called the “OB Pause”) – they make a wide turn and fly south over the ocean and cross over the lightly populated area near Silver Strand State Beach.
But the new path would have airliners make a sharper turn, crossing Point Loma. saving fuel and pollution, the FAA claims.
By Phillip Smith / AlterNet
The California Coalition for Cannabis Policy Reform, also known as ReformCA, has filed a draft marijuana legalization initiative with state officials, the group announced Sunday.
The long-anticipated move means the campaign best-placed to bring legalization to the Golden State can finally get underway.
The Control, Regulate and Tax Cannabis Act of 2016 would allow people 21 and over to possess and cultivate limited amounts of marijuana and it would set up legal marijuana commerce overseen by a pair of new state agencies, the California Cannabis Commission and the Office of Cannabis Regulatory Affairs.
Editor: Since this article appeared, the Pentagon has changed its story. Now it says that air-strikes were called in by Afghan government soldiers.
By Nadia Prupis / Common Dreams
Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) on Sunday called the U.S. military’s Saturday airstrike on its charity hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan a war crime and announced it was withdrawing all staff from the beleaguered area.
MSF said 22 people, including medical workers and patients, were killed in the bombing, which occurred around 2:10 am local time and reportedly lasted for at least half an hour.
Public Meeting at Liberty Station – Tuesday, Oct 6
Point Lomans are mobilizing against new airline flight paths being proposed for Lindbergh Field by the FAA.
Opponents of the changes say that the new flight paths would take most planes over Point Loma for a second time. Currently, most planes take-off from Lindbergh going west and fly over the Peninsula – but then take a U-turn south of the Point and continue east.
Maps made public either via the media or opponents show that their concerns are valid.
Point Loma residents crammed a September 11th community meeting with their complaints. Casey Schnoor of Hill Street has website against the FAA changes that includes an online petition – noplanenoise.web – and of this writing has nearly 2400 signatures.

By Jill Richardson / OtherWords
When I began writing about agriculture nearly a decade ago, I learned quickly that people generally believed that Roundup, the best-selling weed killer made by Monsanto, was relatively harmless.
Roundup breaks down quickly, everyone said — and into non-toxic components, they added. If homeowners can buy it at gardening stores, and cities around the United States use it to kill weeds in parks where children play, it must be benign, right?
Wrong. Within the past year, the story has changed.
Nuclear Shutdown News chronicles the decline and fall of the nuclear power industry, both in the US and worldwide, and highlights the efforts of those who are working to create a nuclear free future.
By Michael Steinberg /Black Rain Press
Disaster Capitalism and the Shutdown of the San Onofre Nuclear Plant
This story starts with a clandestine dinner in Warsaw, Poland. Present are Michael Peevey, president of the California Public Utility Commission, and Stephen Pickett, a high ranking official with Southern California Edison, a major electrical utility.
In an historic first – probably – the Ocean Beach Town Council held their monthly public meeting outside. Due to some kind of alarm problem at their usual venue – the Masonic Center – which made it impossible to meet inside, the Town Council met right outside using the blare of lights to illuminate their goings-on. Sixty audience members joined the ten or so OBTC board members.
By Susan Millward/ Animal Welfare Institute /September 24, 2015
SeaWorld Entertainment announced the “Blue World” Project last year.
The project proposes to invest $100 million per park (for a total of $300 million) for the construction of a larger tank next to each park’s Shamu Stadium, to display the company’s orcas when they are not performing.
Superficially, this appears to be an effort to improve the welfare of these large ocean predators by giving them more space, …
Fisherman are having a great time these days as it’s a banner season with boatloads of bluefin tuna, dorado and yellowtail returning to the docks of Point Loma. Anglers are catching 100- to almost 200-pound bluefin tuna off our coast, further out west and up north, locals say -normally not seen up here.
Usually the tropical fish are reeled in off Mexico and far off-shore, but now they’re being hooked as close as 10-20 miles off of San Diego, where water temperatures are exceptionally warm.
Pancake Breakfast Served 850 Mouths – a Great Success
Friends of OB Library Book Sale Sept 26
OB Residents Upset at Stench From Feral Cats in Apartments at Bacon and Santa Cruz
Kevin McKay Passes – Former Peninsula Beacon Editor
Boarded-Up Medical Building in Midway District Sold
Crash at End of I-8 Prompted Sig-Alert – Motorcyclist Loses Foot
Reporter Confronts Man With Stolen Bike from Animal-Rights Activist
Paddle Around OB Pier for Clean Water Expected to Draw Hundreds of Surfers – Sun., Sept. 27th
Fund Raising for Injured San Diego Lifeguard
More from the Sunset Cliffs Natural Park Council Meeting of Monday September 14, 2015
By Lois Lane
The Sunset Cliffs Natural Park Council meeting on September 14th featured a special guest speaker, Wayne Chiu, Water Resource Control Engineer for the Storm Water Management Unit, California Water Quality Control Board, San Diego Region (Region 9).
What he had to say was important to Sunset Cliffs, and also Ocean Beach. As we all know, water flows down-hill, and particularly in the Peninsula communities; this means it ends up at the beach or in the bay.
This speaker was present because a Point Loma activist, Dr. Craig Barilotti, had requested that Sunset Cliffs Natural Park be added to the Regional MS4 (“Municipal Separate Storm Sewer Systems”) permit.
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