Cool Heads Prevail on Mission Bay Park Committee — They Refuse Spending $600K on How to Divvy Up South Shores Before Analysis of Its History as Trash and Industrial Waste Dump
Cool heads have, for the moment at least, prevailed on the Mission Bay Park Committee. A majority of the city-backed committee has rejected spending $600,000 on an analysis of how best to divvy up the land known as South Shores between different recreational activities.
When the Committee met earlier this week on Tuesday, they voted 5 to 3 against spending “$600,000 creating a proposed map of amenities — called a general development plan by city officials — before studying which parts of South Shores are too toxic for the public to use,” as David Garrick at the San Diego U-T reported today. Garrick continued:
Committee members strongly support transforming the 100 acres of underutilized land into public amenities — but they said the city must first analyze the land’s history as a dumping site for trash and industrial waste in the 1950s. They said it makes no sense to spend $600,000 creating a proposed map of amenities — called a general development plan by city officials — before studying which parts of South Shores are too toxic for the public to use.
“People are walking around with knowledge there is toxic waste somewhere under the ground in South Shores,” said Jeff Johnson, the committee’s chair. “Before we do a GDP, we should spend money to do an objective study to find out where it is, what it is and how bad it is.”

by Ernie McCray
From Becca – Neighbors of Encanto
Actual New Owners Also Plan to Build the Controversial 56-Unit Complex at 1004 Rosecrans
By Richard Schulte /
By Jenna Gordon
Our plans are to renovate the existing building. The building will stay in its current spot, and remain one story. We will create an outdoor patio space, including a zone for kids. Because it’s the right thing for the neighborhood and the patrons, we will also be keeping the parking lot intact, though it will be a parking lot for the cafe, not a paid lot.
City leaders and politicians have been hearing a lot from San Diego residents recently about how much the City should charge for trash pickup.
By Bruce Coons /
by Ernie McCray
Around 4,000 new apartments are set to open throughout San Diego County this year, 2025, coming near or matching totals of the past few years. But many of the new complexes will be charging well above the average, with some hitting $3,000 a month.
More than 1,000 protests against the policies of President Donald Trump are set for Saturday, April 5th across the country, with 117 planned in California alone. And they’re being sponsored and planned by a number of brand new nation-wide groups, like “Hands Off” and “50501,” as well as by a coalition of dozens of civil rights, environmental, education, social justice and labor groups.
By Ed Baier /The Beachcam





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