A New Year’s Plea for Parking Justice
By Kate Callen
2025 begins the enforcement of California’s “Daylighting Law” that reduces parking near street corners. The new rule will improve public safety. It also will shrink the availability of curbside space.
The City of San Diego could use this as an opening to help neighborhoods with severe parking shortages. Stronger enforcement of existing rules would ease the pressure on jammed communities. Citations of obvious infractions would generate revenue and send a message that resonates.
The “Daylighting” measure aims to improve visibility at intersections by prohibiting parking “within 20 feet of the vehicle approach of any marked or unmarked crosswalk, even if a red curb is not present.”
The wording leaves room for interpretation. “Unmarked crosswalk” seems to cover intersections where people might cross the street. That would include every intersection. The absence of a red curb to indicate where you can’t park means, in essence, you’re on your own.

The Point Loma High School PA Baseball Booster is collecting Christmas trees to fundraise for the high school’s baseball program. Each $30 donation goes straight to the program to benefit the players.
Lisa Mortensen was sent a holiday greeting recently from Congressmember Scott Peters. Here’s her holiday greeting back and response.
During the spring and summer of 2021, the Navy orchestrated public outreach and feedback with virtual meetings that were well-attended. There were many cogent suggestions such as this government land be set aside for military housing and public park with ‘non-profit’ oriented retail. We expected the Navy to provide affordable military housing for its active-duty personnel. We also questioned the Navy’s reasoning of having private high-rise residential and hotel use surrounding a top security building which seemed to be a major breach to secure such a highly sensitive facility. Which is why we believed the Navy should have considered our options to rebuild a state-of-the-art top-security building to house the SPAWAR systems and secure the surrounding area of the building with government housing.
by Ernie McCray
A permanent barricade is being installed this week on a small section of the bluffs on Sunset Cliffs Boulevard in Point Loma because of continuing coastal erosion.
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