Large Snag Hits San Diego’s Efforts to Control Liberty Station in Point Loma
By David Garrick / San Diego Union-Tribune / April 1, 2026
San Diego’s efforts to cement its long-term control over Liberty Station have hit a snag that could force the city to sell the leafy complex of public parks, artist studios, restaurants and shops just east of Point Loma.
The city must get several local school districts, community college districts and health districts to agree to payouts as part of a complicated process required to retain control of former redevelopment agency properties.
Eight of those 14 agencies have recently agreed to Liberty Station payout offers from the city — but the San Diego Unified School District board is raising questions and voted unanimously last Tuesday to delay any decision indefinitely.
That vote came after the board was lobbied by the private company that manages much of Liberty Station to reject the city’s $1.4 million payout offer, contending the payout should be closer to $10 million.
City officials say the management company, Seligman Properties, is disingenuously trying to scuttle the deals so the city will be forced to sell it Liberty Station at a substantially deflated purchase price.
Because Seligman already controls 330 acres of Liberty Station’s commercial areas under no-rent leases that run through 2070, city officials contend it wouldn’t make sense for any other company to bid against Seligman — limiting how much the city can get.

By Dave Myers / 
The City of San Diego has begun the process of replacing the 44-year old Mission Beach lifeguard station. On March 14, the city began fencing off the existing lifeguard tower from the public and started installing a temporary lifeguard tower and trailer just north of the current dilapidated station.
Editordude: The following was sent to us unsolicited and requested we publish it as an effort to open some dialogue.
Every Saturday at 10:30 am. San Diego Climate Mobilization Coalition Meetings April 4th, 11th, 18th and 25th
By Bruce D Coons, Barry Hager and Geoffrey Hueter /
By Mark Joseph Stern /
By Kate Callen and Paul Krueger
By Lori Weisberg and Alexandra Mendoza / 
Congrats to Mandy Havlik, Andrew Hollingworth, Angela Vedder, Dee Brown, Cori Salcido, who were elected to 3 year seats on the Peninsula Community Planning Board and Eric Law and Robert Jackson who were elected to 1 year seats.
Mandy Havlik currently serves as the First Vice Chair of the Peninsula Community Planning Board (PCPB). She is a proud spouse of a disabled Navy Combat Veteran, a mother of two, and an indigenous woman who is a registered member of the Timiskaming First Nation in Canada. Most recently, Mandy ran for City Council in District 2 in 2022 and is preparing to run again in 2026.





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