Category: San Diego

‘This Week at City Hall’ — From the San Diego Community Coalition

 Staff  December 15, 2025  2 Comments on ‘This Week at City Hall’ — From the San Diego Community Coalition

Coalition Bulletin: “This Week at City Hall”

The San Diego Community Coalition publishes this email bulletin to keep our members and the public informed about important Council and Planning Commission Hearings. City Hall is beginning to wind down this week before it goes into a 3-week legislative recess for the holidays. We will resume this bulletin when the city government reopens Monday, January 12.

Monday, December 15: City Council, 10:00 a.m.

Agenda link:

Items include: Closed session discussion of “City of San Diego v. 101 Ash, LLC et al,” involving “the City’s claims against its contractors for negligent disruption of asbestos during renovations of the 101 Ash Street property.”

Why it matters: After 10 long years of civic disgrace and hundreds of millions of dollars gone, this albatross is still around the city’s neck. Will it ever end?

Monday, December 15: City Council, 2:00 p.m.

Agenda link:

Continue Reading ‘This Week at City Hall’ — From the San Diego Community Coalition

Residents Are Really Not Satisfied With Life in San Diego — Despite Survey Gloria Is Touting

 Source  December 15, 2025  4 Comments on Residents Are Really Not Satisfied With Life in San Diego — Despite Survey Gloria Is Touting

By Paul Krueger / Times of San Diego / December 13, 2025

Mayor Todd Gloria is spreading the word about a national survey that shows 76% of San Diego residents are “very satisfied” or “satisfied” with their city.

According to Gensler Research, San Diego ranks second in “satisfaction with their city as a place to live,” trailing only San Antonio with a 78% score.

But Axios, which published the results, cautioned that “satisfaction” is a “broad” term, defined as “a general vibe check on how people are feeling about job opportunities, housing costs, safety and other key urban issues.”

And the survey’s methodology reveals a very significant — even disqualifying — limitation: The poll was conducted more than a year ago, from July 18 to Nov 24, 2024.

Since then, there’s been a flurry of activity at City Hall, and most of it is having a negative impact on our personal finances.

Continue Reading Residents Are Really Not Satisfied With Life in San Diego — Despite Survey Gloria Is Touting

Letter to City Council From Donna Frye on Community Plan Updates for Clairemont and the College Area

 Source  December 15, 2025  1 Comment on Letter to City Council From Donna Frye on Community Plan Updates for Clairemont and the College Area

City Says Environmental Impacts in Community Plan Updates for Clairemont and the College Area are Significant, Unmitigated, Unavoidable but Acceptable
City Council to Vote on December 16 to Approve Plan Updates without Requiring an Updated Environmental Impact Report

By Donna Frye

The following is a letter I sent to the city council on December 14 requesting a continuance on the Community Plan Updates for Clairemont and the College Area and the Overlay Zones.


RE: December 16 City Council Meeting, Items 609, 610 and 611; Request for a Continuance to Allow for the Preparation of an Environmental Impact Report

Dear Councilmember,

On December 16, the San Diego City Council will be voting on whether to approve the Community Plan Update for the College Area (Item 609), the Clairemont Community Plan Update (Item 610) and the Citywide Community Enhancement Overlay Zone and Removal of the Community Plan Implementation Overlay Zone for College Area and Clairemont Community Planning Areas (Item 611).

According to the city, Clairemont and the College Area have not had a comprehensive update to their community plans since 1989 – over 35 years ago. The updates will provide “ a comprehensive policy framework for growth and development over the next 30 years.”

Continue Reading Letter to City Council From Donna Frye on Community Plan Updates for Clairemont and the College Area

In City Hall’s Budget Crunch, San Diegans Need to Ask ‘Just How Many Middle-Managers Do We Need?’

 Source  December 12, 2025  5 Comments on In City Hall’s Budget Crunch, San Diegans Need to Ask ‘Just How Many Middle-Managers Do We Need?’

Editordude: Since the issue of “middle managers” employed by the City of San Diego has again emerged during the most recent debates over the city’s budget, we thought it appropriate to re-publish U-T reporter David Garrick’s piece on the subject from last July. And just to remind, Garrick, will be speaking on Saturday, December 13 on “This Just In: Covering the City Hall Beat.” See here for more.

By David Garrick / San Diego Union-Tribune / July 14, 2025

The recent fight at San Diego City Hall over how many middle managers the city employs could signal the start of a shift away from such jobs in the future, after years of their ranks quickly growing.

The battle over middle managers, which emerged during controversial budget negotiations this spring, pitted Mayor Todd Gloria against city labor leaders — and eventually most of the City Council.

Labor leaders lobbied for sharp cuts to middle management positions so the city could lay off fewer front-line workers like librarians and parks maintenance staff in its effort to close a $350 million deficit.

The Municipal Employees Association stressed that there are more than five times as many high-paid middle managers known as “program coordinators” and “program managers” at the city as there were a decade ago.

Continue Reading In City Hall’s Budget Crunch, San Diegans Need to Ask ‘Just How Many Middle-Managers Do We Need?’

‘Historic preservation has become part of the counterproductive YIMBY vs NIMBY debate’

 Source  December 12, 2025  9 Comments on ‘Historic preservation has become part of the counterproductive YIMBY vs NIMBY debate’

By Michael J. Stepner & Mary Lydon / The Daily Transcript / Dec. 10, 2025

The city of San Diego is going through a process to update their heritage preservation program called “Preservation and Progress.” The initiative is a comprehensive update that will streamline processes for new homes and other uses while protecting places of historic, architectural and cultural importance, and encouraging their adaptive reuse.

Historic preservation has gotten tied into the controversy that every perceived obstacle to more housing needs to be eliminated. This is incorrect, but it has become part of the YIMBY versus NIMBY debates, which have become counterproductive.

Continue Reading ‘Historic preservation has become part of the counterproductive YIMBY vs NIMBY debate’

SDPD Is Costing Lives — and Now It’s Costing Us Millions

 Source  December 12, 2025  6 Comments on SDPD Is Costing Lives — and Now It’s Costing Us Millions

By Francine Maxwell

San Diego, how many zeroes do we need to add up before this city finally admits what the community has been screaming for years? The San Diego Police Department is operating without real accountability, without effective training, and without consequences — and the cost keeps going up.

We just hit $50 million in payouts in one week. Thirty million dollars for the police killing of a 16-year-old. Another major payout for a foster youth whose trauma was so egregious it had to be discussed in closed session.

This isn’t bad luck. This isn’t “unfortunate.” This is a pattern — a pattern we keep paying for.

Let’s talk about that $30 million settlement for the killing of a child. Because yes, he was a child. Sixteen.

Continue Reading SDPD Is Costing Lives — and Now It’s Costing Us Millions

A Council Member’s Plea: ‘This could be my son. This is the Black experience in America.’

 Source  December 12, 2025  1 Comment on A Council Member’s Plea: ‘This could be my son. This is the Black experience in America.’

By Paul Krueger

Before the City Council on Tuesday, Dec. 9, approved a $30 million settlement to the family of a teen fatally shot by a San Diego Police officer, Councilmembers Henry Foster III and Sean Elo-Rivera offered their perspective on the shooting and the payment.

The preventable death of 16 year-old Konoa Wilson and subsequent lawsuit against the city and officer Daniel Gold has drawn national attention, including a New York Times story that highlighted the $30 million settlement as one of the largest — if not the largest —  payout to date by a local government for a wrongful death caused by law enforcement negligence or abuse.

But there have been no organized, public demands for answers about how and why the January 28th shooting happened, what discipline — if any — was imposed by SDPD on Officer Gold, and what changes — if any — have been made in officer training as a result of that fatal interaction.

Konoa Wilson was half-black, and Council Member Foster  — who is the city’s only black council member — spent considerable time addressing issues of race and the minority community’s history of mistrust and strained relations with law enforcement.

But Foster’s deeply emotional statements were highly personal.

Continue Reading A Council Member’s Plea: ‘This could be my son. This is the Black experience in America.’

Donna Frye: ‘Mission Bay Park Still Is Not Surplus Land’ — Key Council Vote Could Save Park, Wed., Dec. 17

 Source  December 12, 2025  1 Comment on Donna Frye: ‘Mission Bay Park Still Is Not Surplus Land’ — Key Council Vote Could Save Park, Wed., Dec. 17

City Council to Vote on December 17 on Changes to State Surplus Land Act to Exempt Mission Bay Park

Mission Bay Park Overlooking Fiesta Island, October 29, Sunrise

By Donna Frye

On July 9, the OB Rag published an article by Geoff Page that alerted us to a city staff report requesting that the city council declare three city-leased properties in Mission Bay Park as “Surplus Land”.

The reason cited by the city for declaring the properties “surplus” was the State Surplus Land Act (SLA). The city wanted to issue three new leases for a period longer than 15 years which, according to the city’s understanding of the SLA, would first require the properties be offered to housing developers. The developers could force the city into negotiations to build housing in Mission Bay Park on dedicated public parkland because of the SLA.

The city claimed they had no intention of building housing in Mission Bay Park yet failed to disclose to the public that they had already received an “unsolicited proposal” on July 17  from the current tenant, Southern California Pipe Trades Retirement Fund through their entity SCPT Marina Village, LLC, and was joined by Suntex Marina Investors LLC and Monarch Investment Fund Management Co.,LLC (Suntex-Monarch) to do just that.

Continue Reading Donna Frye: ‘Mission Bay Park Still Is Not Surplus Land’ — Key Council Vote Could Save Park, Wed., Dec. 17

Point Loma High Alum Wins 50k Antarctic Race

 Source  December 11, 2025  0 Comments on Point Loma High Alum Wins 50k Antarctic Race

Sean McKaveney Wins Men’s Division

by: Julian Del Gaudio / Fox5 San Diego / Dec. 10, 2025 

24 hours. Below freezing temperatures. The adventure of a lifetime.

Sean McKaveney’s vacations are unlike any other. He’s a lawyer by day with a lust for life’s ultimate adventures.

One of his recent adventures was the Antarctic Ice Ultra 50k, a total of 31 miles and the ultimate test.

“The wind was howling, it was minus 2 degrees Fahrenheit,” said McKaveney, “We started just about 15 runners. You’re looking through the start gate and all you see is white in every direction, the wind is just pounding your face.”

Continue Reading Point Loma High Alum Wins 50k Antarctic Race

San Diego City Council Approves $30 Million Settlement in Fatal Police Shooting of Konoa Wilson, 16 — Largest Ever in U.S. History

 Source  December 11, 2025  3 Comments on San Diego City Council Approves $30 Million Settlement in Fatal Police Shooting of Konoa Wilson, 16 — Largest Ever in U.S. History

By Staff and wire reports / Times of San Diego / December 10, 2025

Members of the San Diego City Council voted unanimously Tuesday, December 9 to pay $30 million to the family of a 16-year-old boy who was shot and killed by a police officer.

Wilson’s parents sued the city and San Diego Police Department Officer Daniel Gold following Konoa Wilson’s death the night of Jan. 28.

The boy was fleeing from the downtown Santa Fe Depot after another person fired gunshots at him on a transit platform when he encountered Gold, who was running toward the station. They crossed paths and the officer shot the boy twice in the back “instantly, without any warning,” according to the family’s lawsuit.

Doctors pronounced Konoa dead at a hospital less than an hour later.

His family’s attorneys believe the settlement may be the largest amount paid in a case stemming from a police killing in U.S. history. It surpasses the $27 million paid by Minneapolis to the family of George Floyd.

Continue Reading San Diego City Council Approves $30 Million Settlement in Fatal Police Shooting of Konoa Wilson, 16 — Largest Ever in U.S. History

‘To Understand San Diego’s Housing Crisis, Imagine Over 10,000 Homes Being Demolished for Airbnbs’

 Frank Gormlie  December 11, 2025  19 Comments on ‘To Understand San Diego’s Housing Crisis, Imagine Over 10,000 Homes Being Demolished for Airbnbs’

By Chase Wilson / Op-Ed San Diego U-T / December 11, 2025 

If you want to understand San Diego’s housing crisis, forget the jargon for a moment. Forget the zoning charts, the staff reports, the alphabet soup of agencies. Start with something simple anyone can picture: a house. Now imagine it being knocked down. Imagine a demolition. Now imagine that happening 10,600 times.

That’s the number of San Diego homes now functioning as short-term rentals — Airbnbs, VRBOs, vacation bungalows dressed up as houses. Charming little demolitions, each one. They stand upright, freshly painted, Instagram-ready, but in housing terms they might as well be a pile of rubble. Some are empty second homes, rented only occasionally. Many are investments, rented constantly. But however often they’re booked, the effect is the same. Once a home becomes a short-term rental, it undergoes a quiet demolition — not with a wrecking ball, but with a booking link.

Once demolished, a family cannot live in it, a nurse cannot rent it, a young couple cannot begin their lives in it. That unit vanishes from the fragile ecosystem of available housing stock, and the disappearance doesn’t happen in isolation. A would-be renter stays where they are. Their home doesn’t open up for someone else. The chain reaction continues — down the market, across neighborhoods, through generations.

Continue Reading ‘To Understand San Diego’s Housing Crisis, Imagine Over 10,000 Homes Being Demolished for Airbnbs’

Rally to End Rodeos in San Diego — Waterfront Park, Sat., Dec.13

 Source  December 11, 2025  1 Comment on Rally to End Rodeos in San Diego — Waterfront Park, Sat., Dec.13

San Diego chapter of Direct Action Everywhere wants to end cruelty in the name of entertainment in San Diego

A local group is calling on concerned San Diego residents to gather to call for an end to what they term “the barbaric Padres Rodeo at Petco Park” because of the deaths of a pregnant horse and her baby in January of 2025. This will be on Saturday, Dec. 13 at Waterfront Park. The event is organized by the San Diego chapter of Direct Action Everywhere.

They hope to be heard by the San Diego Padres, the city of San Diego, and the C5 Rodeo Company Inc., all of which organizers claim profit from the animal cruelty at the Padres Rodeo. This peaceful event will include speeches, live music, interactive art from local artists, and a collective call to action.

Continue Reading Rally to End Rodeos in San Diego — Waterfront Park, Sat., Dec.13