Diablo Canyon Nuke Plant Generates Too Much Energy and It’s Too Expansive — Solar Power Underestimated
By Tom Fudge / KPBS / Dec. 12, 2024
San Diego County’s nuclear power plant, San Onofre, was closed more than 10 years ago. But the Diablo Canyon plant is still open and cranking out 18,000 gigawatts a year.
The contract for the Diablo Canyon nuclear plant was set to expire by the end of next year. But a bill passed two years ago by the legislature has kept it open an additional five years, closing one reactor in 2029 and the other in 2030. The plant, near San Luis Obispo, generates nearly 10% of California’s total energy. But critics say it’s actually giving the state too much energy, especially in the spring when hydropower production is at its highest.

There’s limited seating at the upcoming talk and book-signing by Frank Gormlie on his new history, The May 1970 Rebellion.
Former San Diego Mayor Jerry Sanders announced earlier in the month that he would be retiring at the end of the year as the head of the San Diego Regional Chamber of Commerce and, as he has been lauded, “capping a career of public service of more than 50 years.”
Local Union Calls It a Victory for Consumers and Workers
By Mahdi E Diab /
On Saturday December 14th, San Diego Bird Alliance will be hosting its annual Wandering the King Tides event and welcoming the public to witness and participate in documenting this remarkable natural occurrence. The event will take place at Kendall-Frost Marsh Reserve, offering visitors a unique vantage point to observe these extreme tides and their impact on Mission Bay’s last remaining coastal wetlands.
City Sued SeaWorld for more than $12 million in back rent and fees from Pandemic Days
By Kate Callen
The outlook for America is very dismal if Trump carries through on his threats to deport millions of undocumented people – which he made again this week in a TV interview.
Sure, check out these great photos from OB’s Holiday Parade Dec. 7, 2024.
By Beth Demmon / 




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