Category: History

Why Isn’t the H Barracks Lot in Point Loma Open All Day?

 Source  March 27, 2026  4 Comments on Why Isn’t the H Barracks Lot in Point Loma Open All Day?

by Mariana Martínez Barba / Voice of San Diego / March 24, 2026

Four years ago, researchers found that if the city opened a safe parking lot for 24 hours every day, it would be easier to connect individuals who live in their vehicles to services.

Those findings encouraged city officials to make a safe parking lot in Mission Valley available 24 hours a day. That meant people staying at the lot didn’t have to leave during the day and could access services with more flexibility.

Other city safe parking lots have curfews, which means people staying there need to leave during the day and return at night. That’s the case at a safe lot near the airport, known as H Barracks. The city is currently in a legal battle with homeless individuals over the lot’s accessibility.

One of the researchers involved in the previous study of city safe lots still believes it’s more effective to open lots for 24 hours every day. City officials maintain that H Barracks is working as is and are not considering changing its operation hours. Homeless advocates say extended hours could help, but San Diegans living in their cars aren’t sure.

Continue Reading Why Isn’t the H Barracks Lot in Point Loma Open All Day?

Rag Writers Take Aim at New and Old Trash Cans

 Staff  March 27, 2026  8 Comments on Rag Writers Take Aim at New and Old Trash Cans

Editordude: Two Rag writers take aim today at the city’s rollout of the new trash cans. South OB Girl and Abby (who has writes under Csaba) offer their observations.

The New Gray Trash Cans Have Arrived

By South OB Girl

The new City of San Diego Environmental Services gray trash cans have arrived.  The new policies regarding trash have been a topic of much discussion in previous months and there was much discontent expressed by many San Diegans when the ballot measure was voted into action and approved by San Diego voters.  Some residents have filed a lawsuit in response and it is still under way.  For those still deciding about their trash service and trash can options, here are links to contact City of San Diego Environmental Services and calculate your potential trash fee, which would be part of your taxes:

Continue Reading Rag Writers Take Aim at New and Old Trash Cans

4 Weeks of Trump’s War: Trump Lies to Get More Time for Ground Operation; San Diego Enters the War; Who Wants to Keep the War Going?

 Frank Gormlie  March 27, 2026  1 Comment on 4 Weeks of Trump’s War: Trump Lies to Get More Time for Ground Operation; San Diego Enters the War; Who Wants to Keep the War Going?

As we finish up the four weeks of Trump’s war on Iran, it’s time to offer some key observations from Southern California.

  • Trump is lying about the pace of “negotiations” with Iran in order to garner more time to accumulate more US troops in the region; this is all his “art of the deal” — confuse your opponent, make them believe you’re about to “walk away” from any talks on resolution. In this case, Trump has confused the American people, the mainstream media, European allies — even his own staff at the White House. On Thursday, he stated he didn’t care about the negotiations.
  • Trump earned his TACO nickname, and changed his deadline for Iran, again for the third time. Trump Always Chickens Out.
  • Despite Trump’s claims the “war is already won”, Iran and Israel continue to shell each other — even escalated attacks — and more deaths and injuries mount. Iran says 1400 of its people have been killed in the strikes over the last 4 weeks.
  • The Straits of Hormuz are still closed to Iran’s adversaries. Trump couldn’t get any NATO or other ally to help free the fiery zone.
  • Troops, marines, sailors are on their way; there’s reports that Trump has ordered another 10,000 soldiers to the region; there’s two ships filled with sailors and marines on their way to the Mid-East; there’s a brigade of the 82th Airborne Division on its way.
  • America is on the verge of experiencing the largest protest — No Kings — in history, tomorrow March 28th as over 7 million people will be marching and protesting. Thousands of San Diegans will be protesting at the  22 events just in San Diego County. (The Rag will host an all-day liveblog about the events.)
  • San Diego is about to enter the war big time: thousands of Marines from Camp Pendleton have been mobilized to go; many of their families live in the San Diego region, and if there are boots on the ground, expect to see many locals on casualty lists.
Continue Reading 4 Weeks of Trump’s War: Trump Lies to Get More Time for Ground Operation; San Diego Enters the War; Who Wants to Keep the War Going?

Is Ocean Beach Really Getting This Bad?

 Source  March 27, 2026  12 Comments on Is Ocean Beach Really Getting This Bad?

Earlier this week, an opinion piece appeared in the San Diego Union-Tribune, written by occasional Rag writer Jillian Butler, with the headline, “Why Ocean Beach needs ‘broken windows’ policing.” It decried the sad state of OB and complained of the graffiti, drug use and fights visible in public. Butler stated:

The 5000 block of Newport Avenue in Ocean Beach was once a cultural and business haven. Now, it is commonplace to stroll through the area on any day and witness individuals using heroin, openly selling drugs, defecating or masturbating. … However, as any business owner of an establishment on Newport can tell you, stabbings, druggings and brawls are no longer uncommon occurrences.

Butler states that non-violent offenses no longer are dealt with by San Diego police, OB needs what’s called “broken windows’ policing.” This is a community-based system of policing and caring for a community; repair the windows, cover up the graffiti to show that residents care about the neighborhood.

But drug use, graffiti and fights have been common in OB for decades. Yet, Butler raises the issue: has it worsened? Is Ocean Beach really getting this bad?

What’s your view?

Here’s Butler’s piece:

Why Ocean Beach needs ‘broken windows’ policing

By Jillian Butler

On the wall beside the CVS parking lot in Ocean Beach, a graffiti tag appeared months ago. Since then, more tags have followed. Drug use and fights in the parking lot are no longer unusual, and the sense that no one is responsible for maintaining order has become increasingly difficult to ignore.

Criminologists call this the “broken windows” theory: Visible signs of disorder signal that lawlessness will be tolerated, inviting more serious crime to follow. Though critics dubbed this theory inequitable, my coastal San Diego neighborhood of Ocean Beach has become a case study in what happens when small crimes and public disorder are allowed to persist.

Continue Reading Is Ocean Beach Really Getting This Bad?

Bill Introduced in State Senate to Exempt Midway Rising Project From CEQA Review

 Source  March 26, 2026  26 Comments on Bill Introduced in State Senate to Exempt Midway Rising Project From CEQA Review

Voice of San Diego Staff / March 26, 2026

State Sen. Akilah Weber Pierson has introduced a bill that would exempt the Midway Rising project from the requirements of the California Environmental Quality Act.

We had reported that San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria and his team were considering seeking legislation like this to ensure the project could survive legal challenges even after courts threw out two voter-approved ballot measures to raise the height limit in the Midway area. Developers were confident they could rely on the state’s density bonus housing laws to ensure they could build higher than the 30-foot building height limit on the coast.

Now legislation is moving forward to pre-empt any legal challenges.

The bill: It’s SB-958. You can read it here. It would have the Legislature declare the many attributes of the project — the thousands of new homes, including many restricted for people with low incomes, new parks, new arena and other improvements.

Continue Reading Bill Introduced in State Senate to Exempt Midway Rising Project From CEQA Review

No Kings Protests at 22 Sites in San Diego County March 28th — Updated List

 Frank Gormlie  March 25, 2026  13 Comments on No Kings Protests at 22 Sites in San Diego County March 28th — Updated List

Tens of Thousands Expected Across San Diego County for No Kings March 28 

Organizers anticipate largest San Diego turnout yet after 80,000+ joined October mobilization

Tens of thousands of San Diego County residents are expected at 22 rallies, marches and family-friendly events on Saturday, March 28, building on the 80,000+ who mobilized countywide in October 2025. Participants say they are mobilizing in defense of democratic institutions, civil liberties, and social programs affecting San Diego families. Events are scheduled across San Diego County, including Downtown San Diego, Ocean Beach, La Jolla, Carmel Valley, Mira Mesa, Carlsbad, Oceanside,Vista, San Marcos, Escondido, Fallbrook, Temecula, Valley Center, Rancho Bernardo, Ramona, La Mesa, El Cajon, Chula Vista, Otay Mesa and Borrego Springs.

Here’s the updated list of No Kings events within San Diego County, March 28

MAIN SAN DIEGO RALLY & MARCH
Waterfront Park
10:00 a.m.–noon | 1600 Pacific Hwy, San Diego, CA 92101

Schedule:
10:00–10:45 a.m. — Main program & speakers
10:45 a.m.–noon  — March; return to Waterfront Park

Continue Reading No Kings Protests at 22 Sites in San Diego County March 28th — Updated List

Balboa Park Needs Your Voice

 Kate Callen  March 24, 2026  6 Comments on Balboa Park Needs Your Voice

A drive to create a public-private Park conservancy will launch Saturday, March 28 with public Town Hall

By Kate Callen

The people of San Diego are the real stakeholders of Balboa Park, and they are ready to take back their “crown jewel” from a city government that has neglected and exploited it.

A grassroots drive to create a public-private Park conservancy will launch Saturday, March 28, at a San Diego Community Coalition town hall at 9:30 a.m. at the Mission Valley Library, 2123 Fenton Parkway. The forum is co-hosted by Neighbors for a Better San Diego.

Continue Reading Balboa Park Needs Your Voice

The End of Feng Sui in Balboa Park?

 Source  March 24, 2026  4 Comments on 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.

Continue Reading The End of Feng Sui in Balboa Park?

75-Year-Old Mission Bay Restaurant Could Be Forced Out by City’s Redevelopment Plan

 Source  March 24, 2026  3 Comments on 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.”

Continue Reading 75-Year-Old Mission Bay Restaurant Could Be Forced Out by City’s Redevelopment Plan

SOHO Sues City of San Diego for Approving Changes to Historic Preservation Program Without Required Environmental Review

 Source  March 24, 2026  3 Comments on 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.

Continue Reading SOHO Sues City of San Diego for Approving Changes to Historic Preservation Program Without Required Environmental Review

This Is Outrageous! GOP Riverside Sheriff Chad Bianco Seizes 650,000 Ballots in Challenge to California Redistricting Vote

 Source  March 23, 2026  5 Comments on 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.

Continue Reading This Is Outrageous! GOP Riverside Sheriff Chad Bianco Seizes 650,000 Ballots in Challenge to California Redistricting Vote