Planting Trees in San Diego But Losing Equity, Science, and Respect
Parallels and pushbacks from national and local politics — Comments on Ready, Set, Grow San Diego, City of San Diego
By Anne S. Fege, Urban and Community Forester / March 27, 2025
The first 60 days of this Administration have diminished and dismantled equity, science, and respect, and there are parallels to the local “Ready, Set, Grow San Diego” (RSG) project. Even as the $10 million urban forestry grant will contribute modestly to climate action, it could have gained so much more in community engagement and equity. Seeing and hearing the national impacts in these 60 days now shows me great parallels. I will continue offering suggestions and advising community groups and I will not be silent, afraid, or withdrawn.
Diminished equity.
- As this Administration attempts to “erase DEI,” I am reminded that “climate equity” was approved and celebrated by the Mayor and Council, yet this RSG grant falls short in several ways.

By Tammy Murga /
By South OB Girl
By Lynne Miller
On Monday, March 31, the City of San Diego’s administrative offices and other services will be closed in observance of César Chávez Day. The following is a guide to which services will be impacted by the holiday closure next week and which will still operate on a normal schedule.
Due to an all-day medical procedure tomorrow, Thursday, March 27, I will not be able to administer the Rag during the day and the site will be dark. That means there will not be any new posts and I will not be able to okay comments.
The following is from a report by Ann Jarmusch in her San Diego Historical Resources: Designations and Board Reports in the 
In 2023, the City of San Diego began a $13.2 million project to improve University Avenue and the surrounding roads while ostensibly increasing safety for pedestrians in City Heights.
By Jennifer Van Grove /
For San Diegans on a 9-to-5 work schedule, visiting a museum during their usual operating hours can make it seem like weekend trips are the only option. Most museums closed their doors at 5 p.m. and some as early as 3 or 4 p.m. Even the weekend operating hours at local museums can make it difficult to plan an evening date or other late-night outings. But this isn’t true for every place.




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