Owner Demands PB’s ‘Turquoise Tower’ Project Be Issued ‘Automatic Approval’ by City; City Says Owner Caused Delay

 Source  December 19, 2025  0 Comments on Owner Demands PB’s ‘Turquoise Tower’ Project Be Issued ‘Automatic Approval’ by City; City Says Owner Caused Delay

by Dave Schwab / Times of San Diego / Dec. 19, 2025

The battle over the controversial 23-story Vela “Turquoise tower” project in North Pacific Beach could be headed to court.

The development at 970 Turquoise St., which includes both hotel rooms and residential units, with some reserved for low-income residents, has become a poster child for growing opposition to city policies meant to spur dense homebuilding.

But even city officials who have long been advocates for the city’s housing push have sided with local opponents who say the project is out of scale with the neighborhood.

Los Angeles-based developer Kalonymus and its attorneys are now arguing the project should be considered “automatically approved” because the city missed a state deadline meant to expedite housing approvals. Their argument would require the city to issue building permits immediately.

City planners acknowledge that the project has not been approved yet— but they say Kalonymus itself has played a big role in the project’s delay.

Continue Reading Owner Demands PB’s ‘Turquoise Tower’ Project Be Issued ‘Automatic Approval’ by City; City Says Owner Caused Delay

City Council Votes to Support Amending State Surplus Land Act to Protect Our Mission Bay Park

 Source  December 19, 2025  5 Comments on City Council Votes to Support Amending State Surplus Land Act to Protect Our Mission Bay Park

By Donna Frye

On December 17th, a city council majority voted to adopt their Legislative Priorities for 2026. Included in those priorities was language specific to Mission Bay Park that supports amending the State Surplus Land Act to exclude Mission Bay Park so it could not be used for housing development.

Their priorities also included supporting “ legislation that would amend the State Surplus Land Act to clarify that not all public land is suitable for housing, particularly where development would conflict with the City Charter or voter-approved measures, including, but not limited to, dedicated public parkland such as Mission Bay Park, Balboa Park, Mission Trails Regional Park, other regional parks, open space, or canyons.”

This is the outcome we all have worked so hard for since July, when we first learned about the issue of surplus land.  At that time, it looked like it might be a done deal since the Land Use and Housing Committee had voted to support it. But we got the matter continued when it went to the city council and here we are- not out of the woods but headed in the right direction.

Continue Reading City Council Votes to Support Amending State Surplus Land Act to Protect Our Mission Bay Park

City Council Approves Community Plan Updates for the College Area — Slammed with 300% Pop. Increase — and Clairemont — Only a 50% Increase

 Frank Gormlie  December 18, 2025  7 Comments on City Council Approves Community Plan Updates for the College Area — Slammed with 3007 Pop. Increase — and Clairemont — Only a 507 Increase

On Tuesday, December 16, the San Diego City Council approved new updates to community plans of two long term neighborhoods– Clairemont and the College Area. The updates are considered blueprints for development changes over the next 30 years — and both project thousands of new residents to both of the neighborhoods by allowing mid-rise and high-rise housing in more places.

Although approved on the same day by votes of 7–1, the updates were treated differently. The College Area plan slams the community with a projected tripling of the current population to nearly 77,000. U-T reporter David Garrick calls the approach to College as “more aggressive…” Clairemont is projected with a 50% population increase.

Also, as Garrick reported:

The number of housing units in Clairemont would rise by 59%, from 33,300 to 52,800, while the number of units in the College Area would more than quadruple, from 8,200 to 34,000.

Continue Reading City Council Approves Community Plan Updates for the College Area — Slammed with 300% Pop. Increase — and Clairemont — Only a 50% Increase

Council President LaCava Kicks Councilmember Raul Campillo Off Key Committee for Not Being ‘Yes’ Man

 Source  December 18, 2025  13 Comments on Council President LaCava Kicks Councilmember Raul Campillo Off Key Committee for Not Being ‘Yes’ Man

By David Garrick / San Diego Union-Tribune / Dec. 17, 2025

San Diego Councilmember Raul Campillo believes asking hard questions and standing up for residents with “inconvenient” beliefs got him kicked off the City Council’s pivotal Land Use and Housing Committee.

Campillo, who was replaced on the committee Wednesday by Councilmember Stephen Whitburn, says he’s being punished for not being a “yes” man and debating too vigorously during meetings.

“Council committee assignments where controversial issues are discussed seem to be reserved for those willing to say ‘yes’ or go along with the program,” Campillo said.

But simply going along with ideas presented by Mayor Todd Gloria’s staff would be a disservice to his constituents and the city, Campillo said.

“Some folks might not like my prosecutorial style or my probative questions,” he said. “Too bad — that’s what many ideas and items around here clearly need.”

Continue Reading Council President LaCava Kicks Councilmember Raul Campillo Off Key Committee for Not Being ‘Yes’ Man

Reader Rant: ‘Rudeness Isn’t Councilmember Elo-Rivera’s Only Weakness’

 Source  December 18, 2025  15 Comments on Reader Rant: ‘Rudeness Isn’t Councilmember Elo-Rivera’s Only Weakness’

By Danna Givot

If rudeness to his constituents and fellow council members (as noted by Paul Krueger in “Councilmember Elo-Rivera Leaves the Dias while Resident Speaks at City Council Meeting”) isn’t enough to kill Sean Elo-Rivera’s political career, there is plenty more working against him besides bad manners.

On December 16th, Sean was the primary cheerleader for the College Area Community Plan Update that quadruples the density in this area with no funds or firm commitment to remedy the long term park, recreation center, and fire station deficiencies in this neighborhood in his District 9. The upzoning in the newly passed College Area Plan will immediately make those upzoned properties more expensive based on their development potential. That will please Sean’s campaign donors, but it won’t
solve the community’s serious and long term infrastructure deficiencies, and it won’t make housing more affordable, as noted by Council President Joe LaCava.

While chairing the Select Committee on Addressing the Rising Cost of Living in San Diego, Elo-Rivera has supported exorbitant trash fees

Continue Reading Reader Rant: ‘Rudeness Isn’t Councilmember Elo-Rivera’s Only Weakness’

San Diego’s ‘Hostile Architecture’ Reflects Our Hostile Nature and Disrespect for Public Space — So Much for a ‘Friendly City’

 Source  December 18, 2025  4 Comments on San Diego’s ‘Hostile Architecture’ Reflects Our Hostile Nature and Disrespect for Public Space — So Much for a ‘Friendly City’

by Calista Stocker / Times of San Diego / Dec. 16, 2025

In 2017, the Metropolitan Transit System spent $1.4 million upgrading bus stop benches throughout the county. In addition to improved water drainage and material updates, the new benches came with dividers, which their contractor refers to as “vagrant bars.”

That was a year after the city of San Diego raced to install jagged rocks downtown under Interstate 5 in time for the Major League Baseball All-Star Game at Petco Park, and five years before the Downtown Partnership built a controversial bike rack/bench designed to deter lying down.

These are all examples of what urban designers call “hostile architecture.” Commonly referred to as “anti-homeless architecture” or “defensive design,” the concept is used to describe public infrastructure design intended to subtly (or not so subtly) change behavior.

San Diego-based urban designer Howard Blackson argues that hostile architecture reflects the hostility of human nature.

Continue Reading San Diego’s ‘Hostile Architecture’ Reflects Our Hostile Nature and Disrespect for Public Space — So Much for a ‘Friendly City’

OB Mourns Dalton Parr, Head Chef of ‘The Joint’

 Source  December 18, 2025  1 Comment on OB Mourns Dalton Parr, Head Chef of ‘The Joint’

From SanDiegoVille / Dec. 17, 2025

San Diego’s Ocean Beach community is mourning the sudden loss of Chef Dalton Parr, the head chef at The Joint Sushi & Tapas and its sister restaurant The Bowl, who passed away this past Saturday. Parr, just 23 years old, was widely known not only for his talent in the kitchen but for his warmth, humor, and deep connection to the OB hospitality scene.

The Joint announced Parr’s passing in a heartfelt message shared on Instagram, describing him as a “brother, leader, and head chef” whose impact extended far beyond the restaurant

Continue Reading OB Mourns Dalton Parr, Head Chef of ‘The Joint’

Tecolote Shores and Part of Fiesta Island Closed Due to Sewage Leak

 Source  December 17, 2025  2 Comments on Tecolote Shores and Part of Fiesta Island Closed Due to Sewage Leak

On Tuesday, Dec. 16, the San Diego County’s Department of Environmental Health and Quality closed sections of Mission Bay due to a sewage release.  Tecolote Playground, Tecolote Shores and Fiesta Island North Entrance were closed — and the closures remain in effect Wednesday.

According to 7SanDiego:

About one-fifth of a 25,000-gallon sewage leak reached the waters near Fiesta Island amid construction work on the Tecolote Canyon sewer line near Snead Avenue, according to the city of San Diego. The work is part of a larger sewer improvement project.

The leak prompted a water contact closure for the shoreline at the locations in Mission Bay.

Continue Reading Tecolote Shores and Part of Fiesta Island Closed Due to Sewage Leak

Councilmember Elo-Rivera Leaves the Dias while Resident Speaks at City Council Meeting

 Source  December 17, 2025  11 Comments on Councilmember Elo-Rivera Leaves the Dias while Resident Speaks at City Council Meeting

By Paul Krueger

If you’re motivated enough to share a concern with our elected city officials be prepared for some disrespect.

As a rule, only two council members — Steve Whitburn and Joe LaCava — will even acknowledge your presence during non-agenda public comment. They’ll make eye contact with you, and at least give the appearance of listening.

The other seven council members might be listening but they don’t show it. They usually won’t even glance up from their phones or laptops when you start speaking, and rarely give the slightest indication of any interest in what you’re saying.

There have been some recent displays of more blatant disrespect by council members.

On November 19, Vivian Moreno and Sean Elo-Rivera abruptly walked out of a council Rules Committee meeting — with no explanation — depriving the Committee of a quorum and ending discussion of a citizen-proposed ballot measure to reinstate free parking on Sundays in Balboa Parking.

But on December 8th, Sean Elo-Rivera raised the bar for discourtesy.

Continue Reading Councilmember Elo-Rivera Leaves the Dias while Resident Speaks at City Council Meeting

Port of San Diego Expands With 100 Acres of Land and 8,000 Acres of Bay

 Source  December 17, 2025  0 Comments on Port of San Diego Expands With 100 Acres of Land and 8,000 Acres of Bay

By Jennifer Van Grove / San Diego Union-Tribune / December 16, 2025

The local agency that controls the land around San Diego Bay has finalized the governing document that will expand its authority to 7,900 more acres in the bay and another 100 acres on land.

Last week, the Board of Port Commissioners for the San Diego Unified Port District unanimously approved what’s known as the Trust Lands Use Plan, or TLUP, a land-use framework for the mostly submerged lands transferred to the agency in 2020. The commissioners also approved the plan’s associated environmental impact report, or its Mitigated Negative Declaration, which determined that there will be no significant effects once mitigation measures are implemented.

The actions advance the plan for consideration by the California Coastal Commission.

The TLUP is an amendment to the Port Master Plan that, once certified by the Coastal Commission and approved by the California State Lands Commission, will give the port permitting authority over what has colloquially been referred to as “the doughnut hole.” The moniker describes how the port’s jurisdiction has historically wrapped around the coastline of the entire bay, from Shelter Island to the South Bay and Coronado, but excluded the more central water areas.

The mostly submerged lands, previously held in trust by the State Lands Commission, were transferred to the port on Jan. 1, 2020, through California Senate Bill 507. The water and land area, which includes the deep-water federal navigation channel, is said to have been granted to the port for more streamlined management.

Continue Reading Port of San Diego Expands With 100 Acres of Land and 8,000 Acres of Bay

Arena y Fango: The Battle for Dutch Flats — A Page From Point Loma History

 Source  December 17, 2025  4 Comments on Arena y Fango: The Battle for Dutch Flats — A Page From Point Loma History

A sandy, muddy salt marsh is the reason San Diego is the West Coast home of the Marine Corps

By Eric DuVall / Point Loma– OB Monthly SDU-T / December 15, 2025

I liked the old main post office on Midway Drive. Perhaps I should have spoken up sooner. The place was intentionally, brutalistically, functional. Plus, it was close.

Remember the Old Town Philatelic Center in there? No? I don’t know if stamp collectors made much use of that desk or not, but somewhere in that big airplane hangar of a room I once noticed a plaque on the wall, maybe 16 inches square, that proclaimed “DUTCH FLATS — On this site on April 28, 1927, the Spirit of St. Louis was flight-tested by Charles A. Lindbergh.” How cool is that?

I had heard of Dutch Flats, but it is certainly not a place name that folks use these days.

The area referred to as Dutch Flats is simply the alluvial flood plain and former arroyo created by the watercourse of the San Diego River as it flowed past Old Town at the base of Presidio Hill, hung a hard left and was seemingly drawn directly toward San Diego Bay. A substantial portion of what is now arbitrarily referred to as the Midway District, all of the Marine Corps Recruit Depot and parts of Liberty Station and San Diego International Airport were once known as Dutch Flats.

Continue Reading Arena y Fango: The Battle for Dutch Flats — A Page From Point Loma History