‘Why I’m Voting for Terra Lawson-Remer’

 Source  October 21, 2024  13 Comments on ‘Why I’m Voting for Terra Lawson-Remer’

By Mandy Havlik 

Friends, the Democratic majority on the County Board of Supervisors is at risk, and it could have a huge impact on the future of San Diego.

Terra Lawson-Remer is our County Supervisor and a Democrat who’s been making real progress—helping people experiencing homelessness, protecting our coastlines, tackling rising rents and housing costs, and expanding mental health and addiction services.

But now we’re facing a tough re-election against Republican Kevin Faulconer, the former Mayor of San Diego. (Yes, the same Kevin Faulconer responsible for the 101 Ash Street debacle that cost the city of San Diego $264 million for an unusable building full of asbestos, while profiting his campaign donors $15 million ?).

Continue Reading ‘Why I’m Voting for Terra Lawson-Remer’

Two Stabbings in Midway District and Only One Arrest

 Source  October 21, 2024  0 Comments on Two Stabbings in Midway District and Only One Arrest

Apparently, there have been two non-fatal stabbings in the Midway District over the last few days. And there has been an arrest in one of them.

In the first incident, it was late Thursday night, October 17, when a man was arrested in connection with the stabbing of another man during an altercation in the 3900 block of Sports Arena Boulevard.

According to police, a 38-year-old man and a woman were walking at around 10:15 p.m. when the man punched the woman for unknown reasons.

A 45-year-old man in a vehicle witnessed the act, pulled over, got out of the car and confronted the man. The men got into a fight, and that’s when the suspect pulled out some kind of object and stabbed the good Samaritan in his back.

Continue Reading Two Stabbings in Midway District and Only One Arrest

Peninsula Residents Infuriated at City’s Refusal to Provide Details on 56-Unit Project at Rosecrans and Talbot — Town Hall Meeting Planned for Oct.29

 Source  October 21, 2024  7 Comments on Peninsula Residents Infuriated at City’s Refusal to Provide Details on 56-Unit Project at Rosecrans and Talbot — Town Hall Meeting Planned for Oct.29

By Geoff Page

The controversial proposed 56-unit development at the corner of Talbot and Rosecrans Street was up for discussion at the Peninsula Community Planning Board meeting Thursday, October, 17. What attendees learned was how little anyone actually knows about the project, despite efforts by several people. The City refuses to provide any information.

The project has been much discussed here in The Rag, .

Because there was so much public interest in the development, the PCPB put it on the agenda for its October regular monthly meeting and invited the developer to make a presentation. The developer did not attend and has not cooperated with the PCPB’s requests for information.

Continue Reading Peninsula Residents Infuriated at City’s Refusal to Provide Details on 56-Unit Project at Rosecrans and Talbot — Town Hall Meeting Planned for Oct.29

Warren-Walker Middle School Is Back in Ocean Beach

 Source  October 18, 2024  0 Comments on Warren-Walker Middle School Is Back in Ocean Beach

by Dave Schwab / Peninsula Beacon / October 18, 2024

Warren-Walker Middle School is back in Ocean Beach and wants to get word out about it.

“Happiness is within reach in Ocean Beach,” joked Paul Saunders, head of Warren-Walker’s Middle School, who has been with the school for over 18 years.

The homegrown Ocean Beach school is one big extended family. “I began my academic journey as a kindergartner on this campus in the ‘80s,” noted Saunders.

The lower- and middle-school campuses of Ocean Beach’s homegrown independent Warren-Walker School are once again reunited for the 2024-25 academic year and beyond. Previously in Mission Valley, Warren-Walker Middle School for sixth through eighth grades has returned to the Peninsula. The school’s staff is excited to have all of its PK-eighth-grade students this school year at its main campus at 4605 Point Loma Ave.

Continue Reading Warren-Walker Middle School Is Back in Ocean Beach

Port of San Diego on Status of Shelter Island Boat Launch Ramp

 Source  October 18, 2024  3 Comments on Port of San Diego on Status of Shelter Island Boat Launch Ramp

From Port of San Diego / October 18, 2024

The Port of San Diego is making significant progress on repairs needed for the west side of the Shelter Island Boat Launch Ramp. Work is anticipated to begin in December or January with completion in early spring. The Port recognizes the impacts on the boating community. We apologize for the inconvenience, and we appreciate continued patience.

In June 2023, the west floating dock sustained significant damage due to sand accumulation underneath it, which caused the dock to bottom out at low tide. For public safety, the Port closed the dock, with the east side floating docks remaining open and accessible to boaters.

Continue Reading Port of San Diego on Status of Shelter Island Boat Launch Ramp

Carl Schroder Pursued the Quest for a Fishing Pier in Ocean Beach for Decades

 Source  October 18, 2024  2 Comments on Carl Schroder Pursued the Quest for a Fishing Pier in Ocean Beach for Decades

By Eric Duvall / P0int Loma-OB Monthly (SDUT) / October 16, 2024

Perhaps I should not have been a fisherman, he thought. But that was the thing that I was born for.”
—– Ernest Hemingway, “The Old Man and the Sea”

On the day before Halloween in 1936, the front page of The Ocean Beach News carried the following headline: “Fishing pier question again to the front.”

Over 100 people had turned out to hear a representative of the Works Progress Administration discuss a plan to build a fishing pier at the foot of Point Loma Avenue as part of work proposed for Sunset Cliffs Park. The proposal called for the city and county of San Diego to come up with only 25 percent of a $211,000 project.  Plenty of free loot from Uncle Sam!

Did the city jump on that potential windfall? No. Did that deter persistent pier proponent Carl Schroder? No again.

Schroder had first come to Ocean Beach “when the old Cliff House [Hotel] was the only building on the beach.” That was not even in the last century.

Continue Reading Carl Schroder Pursued the Quest for a Fishing Pier in Ocean Beach for Decades

Top U.S. General for Trump Calls Him ‘Fascist to the Core’ and ‘Most Dangerous Person to America’

 Source  October 17, 2024  0 Comments on Top U.S. General for Trump Calls Him ‘Fascist to the Core’ and ‘Most Dangerous Person to America’

By David Badash / AlterNet / October 11, 2024

General Mark Milley, one of then-President Donald Trump’s top generals who served as the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, says the Republican presidential nominee is “fascist to the core” and there is no one in America who has ever posed more of a threat to the nation.

Milley, appointed by Trump in 2019, served as the highest-ranking officer in the U.S. Armed Forces until his retirement last year. His remarks appear in Watergate journalist Bob Woodward’s latest book, “War,” The Independent reports.

After the January 6, 2021 insurrection, Gen. Milley requested a meeting with incoming Attorney General Merrick Garland, “to urge him to investigate domestic violent extremism and far-right militia movements.”

Continue Reading Top U.S. General for Trump Calls Him ‘Fascist to the Core’ and ‘Most Dangerous Person to America’

Settlement of Lawsuit by San Diego Homeless Living in Vehicles Results in Forgiven Citations, Enforcement Changes and Improvements to Safe Parking Lots

 Source  October 17, 2024  3 Comments on Settlement of Lawsuit by San Diego Homeless Living in Vehicles Results in Forgiven Citations, Enforcement Changes and Improvements to Safe Parking Lots

By Christian Martinez / San Diego Union-Tribune / October 17, 2024

A settlement agreement finalized this month, borne out of a class-action lawsuit against the city of San Diego for ordinances that targeted unhoused people living in their vehicles, will see thousands of dollars in citations be forgiven, changes to enforcement of the ordinances and improvements to the city’s safe parking program.

The 2017 lawsuit alleged that two policies, the Oversized Vehicle Ordinance, which prevented RV or large vehicle parking on city streets between 2 a.m. and 6 a.m., and the Vehicle Habitation Ordinance, which prohibited people from living in their vehicles, violated the constitutional rights of otherwise law-abiding people with no other means of shelter.

Continue Reading Settlement of Lawsuit by San Diego Homeless Living in Vehicles Results in Forgiven Citations, Enforcement Changes and Improvements to Safe Parking Lots

Reader Rant: ‘Bay Ho’s Future — Higher Buildings and Density, More ADU Madness and Loss of Neighborhood Culture’

 Source  October 17, 2024  4 Comments on Reader Rant: ‘Bay Ho’s Future — Higher Buildings and Density, More ADU Madness and Loss of Neighborhood Culture’

By David S.

In the Bay Ho area, the installation of the trolley line required a certain amount of ridership. Knowing full well the current residential community would not meet that requirement the Bay Ho neighborhood had a change in allowance of building development zoning which will allow the smaller homes to be leveled, and then built up with increased heights and high density. Leading to the rash approval and apparently blind eye to building codes and as many ADU’s and multi-units as possible.

So, if you are wondering what the future holds for Bay Ho, this is what it will be, higher building, high density and more ADU madness, with of course the loss of the current neighborhood culture.

Continue Reading Reader Rant: ‘Bay Ho’s Future — Higher Buildings and Density, More ADU Madness and Loss of Neighborhood Culture’

Plastic Nurdles Are Everywhere, Especially at the Beach

 Source  October 17, 2024  3 Comments on Plastic Nurdles Are Everywhere, Especially at the Beach

by Delaney White / Fox5 / October 15, 2024

Whether it’s sunglasses, a water bottle, or a TV remote, almost everything is made out of plastic. But how is most plastic assembled?

“It’s easier to ship a lot of something very small instead of big pieces, so they’re made into these little nurdles,” said Mark O’Connor, Surfrider Foundation’s “Rise Above Plastics” program co-lead.

They are transported around the world by trains and boats and then melted into their final form. But many nurdles do not make it to their intended destination. Instead, they end up on San Diego’s beaches.

Continue Reading Plastic Nurdles Are Everywhere, Especially at the Beach