Category: History
The End of Feng Sui in Balboa Park?
by Frank Sabatini Jr./ Uptown News / March 22, 2026
The brouhaha over paid parking in and around Balboa Park became exceptionally clear to me after making two visits by car to our gorgeous public land in recent weeks.
My first visit under the new revenue- generating program was on a balmy weekday in February. It was 50 days after the initiative was implemented in early January — the plan was championed by Mayor Todd Gloria and approved by the San Diego City Council — seemingly enough time for city officials to acquaint us with a cohesive payment system.
I was there to briefly meet a friend at the Timken Museum of Art. I drove into the park at its northwestern section off of Sixth Avenue. That put me onto tree-lined Balboa Drive before hanging left to cross the Laurel Street Bridge. It’s the route I always take to my favorite parking lot located behind the Organ Pavilion, which sits in proximity to the park’s cultural heart, the El Prado.
The sight of pay stations and heavy signage pertaining to the new reality of paid parking was saddening. The materials are aesthetically cold and gawky against the park’s backdrop of lush foliage and historical architecture. It’s as through somebody walked into a large, airy room with good feng shui and cluttered it.
Bigger disappointments followed.
75-Year-Old Mission Bay Restaurant Could Be Forced Out by City’s Redevelopment Plan
by Thomas Murphy / Beach & Bay Press / March 23, 2026
A 75-year-old waterfront restaurant in Mission Bay could be forced out by the city of San Diego’s redevelopment plan, putting Joe Busalacchi’s family business and one of the bay’s oldest tenants at risk.
Sportsmen’s Seafood was the first lease signed in Mission Bay, operating even before the area’s first bridges were built.
Busalacchi has run the restaurant for 36 years, continuing a three-generation family business after his father passed away.
“The city is supposed to serve and protect the citizens of San Diego. They want to kick out all of these people who have to pay rent and pay for their children,” said Busalacchi. “How is that serving and protecting? They ain’t serving me, any of my employees, or anyone on the docks.”
SOHO Sues City of San Diego for Approving Changes to Historic Preservation Program Without Required Environmental Review
This Is a Challenge to City’s Passage of “Package A”
Today, March 24, Save Our Heritage Organisation (SOHO) will file a lawsuit against the City of San Diego which challenges the City’s approval of profound changes to its historic preservation program without the required environmental review by the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). This is about “Package A” which many OBceans are now familiar with.
SOHO’s suit in San Diego Superior Court “seeks an Environmental Impact Report (EIR) process to address adverse environmental impacts to historic resources posed by the City’s proposed Preservation and Progress project,” as SOHO stated in an announcement today.
Here’s the balance of SOHO’s announcement:
The City approved “Package A” of the project without analyzing the potential environmental impacts of weakening protections for historic resources across San Diego by modifications to the Municipal Code and General Plan.
This Is Outrageous! GOP Riverside Sheriff Chad Bianco Seizes 650,000 Ballots in Challenge to California Redistricting Vote
Trumper Sheriff Bianco Is a Republican Candidate for California Governor
By Jen Rice / Democracy Docket / March 23, 2026
A Republican sheriff running for governor of California has seized more than 650,000 ballots cast in last year’s redistricting referendum election, an alarming signal that the FBI’s recent conspiracy-fueled raid of a Georgia county election hub could be just the first in a new string of attacks on the results of past votes.
Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco announced Friday that his office had seized the ballots and would conduct its own hand count after receiving complaints about an alleged discrepancy of 45,000 votes in the Proposition 50 special election. That vote allowed California Democrats to redraw the state’s congressional map to wipe out President Donald Trump’s gerrymandering gains in Texas.
In recent weeks, the FBI has taken custody of ballots in Fulton County, Georgia, and subpoenaed records from Maricopa County, Arizona. In both cases, the focus was the 2020 presidential race.
But like in those cases, there are signs that Bianco’s challenge to the Prop 50 vote is also based on wrong or downright false information.
In statements to the Riverside County Board of Supervisors last month, county registrar Art Tinoco said the actual discrepancy between ballots cast and ballots counted was just 103 votes — roughly 0.016% of ballots. And the claim of a 45,000-vote discrepancy? It was based on misinterpretations of unprocessed, raw data, he said.
Voice of San Diego: ‘District 2 Race Is On’

by Scott Lewis and Will Huntsberry / Voice of San Diego / March 21, 2026
D2 Race Is On
What do you get when a French mime, an MBA student, a merchant marine and a former mayor walk into a community center in Clairemont?
That would be a League of Women Voters candidate forum, of course.
Seven people are running for the District 2 council seat, which includes Ocean Beach, Point Loma, Mission Beach and Clairemont.
Any District 2 voters looking for San Diego’s version of Zohran Mamdani didn’t find him at the forum, which happened earlier this month. The debate was dominated by reaction to new fees, homebuilding and what the candidates viewed as poor management by current city leaders.
Allow me to break out some lanes for you that appeared evident at the forum.
Diverse Mix of OBceans Young and Old Gathered at the Wisteria Cottage for OB Historical Society Fundraiser
By Csaba “Abby” Petre
This past Thursday, March 19th, a unique spring celebration happened under the brilliant flower-covered arbors of a very special house. Kicking off in the late afternoon sun around 4:30, the OB Historical Society’s bi-annual fundraiser took place at the beloved Wisteria Cottage on Niagara Avenue, drawing a joyous and elegantly dressed crowd of long-time locals, new neighbors, and friends of OB alike.
The Wisteria Cottage has a long history in the community; built in 1907, it is one of the oldest homes in OB. Its namesake vine was planted by John Clarke in 1915. Ned and Shirley Titlow remodeled the cottage extensively, built the patio, and constructed the arbor that supports the vine, provides extensive shade, and adds a beautiful touch of color to this part of OB. The Titlows also began the tradition of opening the house for the OBHS fundraiser in the early 2000s.
There’s a War Going On. Gas Prices Are Rising. The US Economy Is in Shambles … and Republicans Are Making it Harder to Vote
Instead of ending the Iran war or improving the economy, Senate Republicans are championing Trump’s MAGA voter suppression bill.
By Ari Berman / Mother Jones / March 18, 2026
The world is on fire. Gas prices are rising. The US economy is in shambles. President Trump has bulldozed through his promise of “no new wars” and 6 in 10 Americans believe the country is worse off than it was a year ago.
But instead of addressing the issues that Americans actually care about, Senate Republicans are spending the next week or more attempting to further what has become the central organizing principle of Trump’s presidency: making it harder to vote.
On Tuesday afternoon the Senate began debating the Save America Act, which voting rights advocates describe as the worst voter suppression bill that Congress has seriously considered passing.
At its core, the bill is a solution in search of a problem, predicated on the lie that non-citizens are systematically voting in American elections.
Housing Commission: ’70+ Unit Project Still Coming to Famosa Canyon’
Construction Could Start As Soon As Late 2027
by Dave Schwab / Times of San Diego / March 17, 2026
For those wondering what’s happening with the affordable housing project proposed in Famosa Canyon, the project is still a go.
It’s just taking a little while.
“Bridge Housing Corp.’s proposed development of affordable housing at the property at the corner of Famosa and Nimitz boulevards is still in the pre-development phase,” said Scott Marshall, vice president of communications and government relations for the San Diego Housing Commission.
Bridge Housing plans to conduct community outreach, submit plans to the city for consideration, apply for necessary financing, and request and obtain building permits before construction can begin.
Construction could start late in 2027, said Marshall. “However, many factors related to these pending items could affect the timeline,” he added.
Viva Dolores!
by Ernie McCray
Oh, I wish so much of the news
didn’t give me the blues,
as hearing Dolores Huerta weigh in
on Cesar Chavez’s sexual abuse
of women and minor children
with allegations
of situations
he put her in
darkened my soul
like midnight
on a moonless night,
making me weep
as I read of her emotional pain,
of how she has kept quiet
over time
so as not to bring negative attention
to the United Farm Worker’s struggles,
A 12-Unit ADU Complex on Canon in Point Loma that Almost Slipped Out of Mind
There is a 12-unit ADU project in Roseville on Canon Street that nearly slipped our collective mind. But our friends at Peninsula News are now reminding us – with the following “tour.”











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