Reader Rant: ‘Saving OB’

 Source  June 5, 2024  7 Comments on Reader Rant: ‘Saving OB’

By Lynne Miller

As a local Obcean I have watched in ignorance and silence as a slow virus spread in our cottage community.  This virus is carried in the minds of humans.  The ideas that create and propagate the virus can begin anywhere. ‘This’ mind virus is a designer virus.  Its origins are not easily identified.  The symptoms are not easy to connect. John Denver’s line, ‘more people, more scars upon the land’ defines a symptom.

Hey, it is inevitable, it is just progress.  Come on OBceans, accept the new ideas packed into SB9 and SB10. What kind of people are you?

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New Poll Shows Mayor Gloria and Supervisor Lawson-Remer in Trouble

 Source  June 4, 2024  16 Comments on New Poll Shows Mayor Gloria and Supervisor Lawson-Remer in Trouble

By Arturo Castañares / La Prensa / May 27, 2024

A new poll released this week shows incumbents San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria and County Supervisor Terra Lawson-Remer are both vulnerable to losing their respective re-elections, and voters are evenly split over City Attorney candidates in the November elections.

The survey, conducted by San Diego pollster Competitive Edge Research, surveyed likely voters about three of the top political campaigns in San Diego, including the race for Mayor, County Supervisor, and City Attorney.

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Separate Water Fountain Memories (Still in a ‘Black History Month’ Frame of Mind)

 Ernie McCray  June 4, 2024  4 Comments on Separate Water Fountain Memories (Still in a ‘Black History Month’ Frame of Mind)

by Ernie McCray

Clicking through
a civil and human rights
kind of website
my eyes came across
a very familiar sight,
images of “Colored Only””
and “White Only”
water fountain signs
which immediately reminded me of
when my mother and I
would travel down below
the Mason and Dixon line

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San Onofre May Be Shut Down, But There’s Still Danger from Nuclear Waste

 Source  June 4, 2024  5 Comments on San Onofre May Be Shut Down, But There’s Still Danger from Nuclear Waste

By Sarah Mosko / Times of San Diego / May 3, 2024

Many residents of Orange and San Diego counties were relieved when the nuclear power plant at San Onofre was permanently shut down in 2013. This naïve thinking, that the plant posed risks to people and property only while the reactors were operational,

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The Fix Is in: Planning Commission Approves University City Plan Update Despite Extensive Opposition

 Source  June 4, 2024  3 Comments on The Fix Is in: Planning Commission Approves University City Plan Update Despite Extensive Opposition

From UC Neighbors for Responsible Growth, aka UC PEEPS

Disappointing but not surprising, the San Diego Planning Commission passed the University Community Plan Update 4-0 last Thursday, May 31, with two members absent, despite extensive opposition, the absence of a final Program EIR, a rushed approval process, and hearing three major land use proposals all on the same day.

The Commissioners chose to ignore the many strong points made about the flaws and consequences of the Plan Update,

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OB’s Only Winery Bids ‘Farewell Ocean Beach’

 Source  June 4, 2024  1 Comment on OB’s Only Winery Bids ‘Farewell Ocean Beach’

From Gianni Buonomo Vintners / June 2, 2024

It’s bittersweet to say good bye to the community that got in on the ground floor to support us. Few gave us much chance to survive on the beer soaked Avenue called Newport. Thanks to you we not only survived, but we flourished.

Good bye Ocean Beach. Thank you very much.

Over the next six weeks Gianni Buonomo Vintners will be moving from the place we’ve called home for the past nine years.

The lease on our building is up for renewal on July 31. The landlord is raising rent 20%. That kind of increase is too great for a small, community based winery to manage.

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Are Shark Attacks Rising in California?

 Source  June 4, 2024  0 Comments on Are Shark Attacks Rising in California?

By Miranda Ceja / Patch San Diego / June 2, 2024

Despite fears of sharks swimming close to California beaches, shark experts say the apex predators of the ocean are unlikely to bite. Still, it has happened.

Last year, a total of 2 people were injured — and one man died — in unprovoked attacks in the waters off California, according to the University of Florida’s International Shark File, a scientific database of global shark attacks.

There were 36 shark attacks in U.S. waters last year, more than half of the 69 bites reported worldwide. More recently, a Southern California beach was shut down during a busy Memorial Day weekend after an “aggressive” shark knocked a surfer from his board.

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Plastic ‘Nurdles’ Are Everywhere — Especially on San Diego Beaches

 Source  June 4, 2024  1 Comment on Plastic ‘Nurdles’ Are Everywhere — Especially on San Diego Beaches

By Phil Diehl / Del Mar Times / June 3, 2024

Nurdles are everywhere. Never heard of them? They are the raw form of plastic resin that’s melted and molded into everything from soda bottles to clothing fabrics, from food packaging to artificial Christmas trees.

However, two local environmental groups say a frightening amount of the pellets skip the useful product stage and are turning up on San Diego County beaches and in its lagoons, part of the rising tide of worldwide plastic pollution.

Nurdles are tiny, petroleum-based lumps about the size and shape of a lentil.

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Scientists Find Plastic-Eating Fungus in Great Pacific Garbage Patch

 Source  June 4, 2024  0 Comments on Scientists Find Plastic-Eating Fungus in Great Pacific Garbage Patch

By Cooper Gegan/ The Inertia / June 3, 2024

A newly published study has identified a fungus living in the sea that can break down plastic. The marine microbe, called Parengyodontium album was found on plastic debris floating in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. When scientists later isolated the fungus in a laboratory, they found it was capable of breaking down the plastic polyethylene after it had first been exposed to UV radiation from sunlight.

The discovery was made by marine microbiologists

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Birria Specialist Opens Mike’s Red Tacos in the Midway

 Staff  June 4, 2024  1 Comment on Birria Specialist Opens Mike’s Red Tacos in the Midway

A local birria specialist opened its second restaurant in the Midway District. Mike’s Red Tacos threw its doors open at 3365 Rosecrans Street Suite D. The eatery was born out of owner Mike Touma’s passion for birria; a native San Diegan, Touma went on a personal eating quest on both sides of the border in preparation to launch his birria-focused food truck back in 2021.

A Clairemont area storefront followed in 2022, and now Mike and his wife Leona just unveiled their new 2,100-square-foot Rosecrans Street restaurant in the Loma Square shopping center.

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Body Found Near Garbage Beach in Sunset Cliffs Area

 Staff  June 3, 2024  4 Comments on Body Found Near Garbage Beach in Sunset Cliffs Area

UPDATE: the body was found at the bottom of the stairs on Ladera Street.According to Times of San Diego, a person was found dead shortly before 10 a.m., today, Monday in the 700 block of Sunset Cliffs Blvd.

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