Solidarity with Minnesota Day of Action in San Diego County

 Source  January 23, 2026  5 Comments on Solidarity with Minnesota Day of Action in San Diego County

ICE OUT FOR GOOD — San Diego County Solidarity Actions & Nationwide Minnesota Day of Action

Friday, January 23, there are coordinated rallies and calls for boycotts across San Diego County as part of “ICE Out for Good”, aligned with the broader Minnesota Solidarity Day of Action opposing recent Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operations and demanding accountability, community safety, and human rights protection.

These local actions are connected to nationwide demonstrations and economic solidarity efforts responding to the federal ICE enforcement surge in Minnesota and the fatal shooting of 37-year-old Renée Good — an unarmed civilian killed by a federal ICE agent during heightened immigration enforcement activity earlier this month — which has sparked widespread protests and national outrage.

SAN DIEGO COUNTY ACTION SCHEDULE — JANUARY 23, 2026

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3-Story, 10 Unit Project Planned for 4800 Block of Santa Monica in OB

 Frank Gormlie  January 23, 2026  8 Comments on 3-Story, 10 Unit Project Planned for 4800 Block of Santa Monica in OB

The City of San Diego has just released a Notice of Future Decision regarding an application for a Process 2 Coastal Development Permit for a 3-story, 10-unit project for 4862 and 4864 Santa Monica Ave. in Ocean Beach. The Notice was dated January 22, 2026.

It’s an application to:

  • to demolish an existing two-story, 2,934 square-foot duplex consisting of two residential units at the rear the property, and
  • construct a three-story, 6,545 square-foot multifamily building consisting of ten (10) units.

Continue Reading 3-Story, 10 Unit Project Planned for 4800 Block of Santa Monica in OB

Billionaire Developer Loses Lawsuit that Sought to Overturn His Requirement to Build Affordable Housing

 Source  January 23, 2026  0 Comments on Billionaire Developer Loses Lawsuit that Sought to Overturn His Requirement to Build Affordable Housing

Billionaire Geoff Palmer Sued the City for Having to Include Some Affordable Housing Units While His Company Builds 1,000s of Units in San Diego.

By Dorian Hargrove / CBS8 / January 22, 2026

A Los Angeles landlord who owns more than 15,000 units in Southern California and is set to build more than 2,500 apartments in San Diego has lost his lawsuit seeking to get out of including affordable housing units in his projects.

According to court documents obtained by CBS 8, on Jan. 16, a federal judge dismissed billionaire Geoff Palmer’s lawsuit, which claimed the city’s inclusionary affordable housing rules were unconstitutional and akin to the government seizing private property.

Currently, Palmer’s company, G.H. Palmer, is finishing a 1,642-apartment project on Convoy Street in Kearny Mesa and is waiting to build nearly 1,000 additional units at a separate project in Grantville.

In Dec. 2022, before construction began on the Kearny Mesa project, Palmer’s company requested that the city exempt the project from the City’s Inclusionary Affordable Housing Requirement. The program required Palmer to set aside 10% of the units, or 164 in the case of the Kearny Mesa development, or to pay “in lieu of fees” for opting out.

The city denied Palmer’s request.

In Sept. 2023, Palmer sued the city, alleging the law was unconstitutional and violated private property safeguards.

Continue Reading Billionaire Developer Loses Lawsuit that Sought to Overturn His Requirement to Build Affordable Housing

General Strike Begins in Minneapolis Against ICE Surge — ‘No Work, No School, No Shopping’ — UPDATED

 Source  January 23, 2026  1 Comment on General Strike Begins in Minneapolis Against ICE Surge — ‘No Work, No School, No Shopping’ — UPDATED

Thousands of Minnesotans chanting “No hate, no fear, immigrants are welcome here,” are marching through downtown Minneapolis to demand ICE leave the state.

The chants ring through the crowd—clearly energized and undeterred by freezing temperatures—that includes teachers, electricians, community members, and others from seemingly countless organizations

Many of the signs refer to Renee Good, a poet, Minneapolis resident and 37-year-old mother of three who was killed on January 7 by an ICE agent.

Good’s killing has been raised throughout the day, including during an act of civil disobedience by faith leaders at the airport, and during an accompanying news conference there.

The civil disobedience from Minnesota faith leaders resulted in the arrests of about 100 clergy who engaged in civil disobedience by blocking a key road at the Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport Friday morning, according to the ICE Out of MN coalition.

/By Michael Sainato and Rachel Leingang / The Guardian / Jan. 23 2026 

A “no work, no school, no shopping” blackout day of protest was kicked off by community leaders, faith leaders and labor unions on Friday, January 23, in protest against the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) surge in the state.

The “Day of Truth & Freedom” protest comes in the wake of the killing of Renee Good, the unarmed woman killed by a federal immigration officer in Minneapolis earlier this month.

Continue Reading General Strike Begins in Minneapolis Against ICE Surge — ‘No Work, No School, No Shopping’ — UPDATED

Reader Rant: ‘Why Is Jen Campbell Asking for an Open-Ended Recusal from City Council Meetings?’

 Source  January 22, 2026  14 Comments on Reader Rant: ‘Why Is Jen Campbell Asking for an Open-Ended Recusal from City Council Meetings?’

By Anonymous Point Loma Resident

I noticed that City Councilmembers Jen Campbell and Joe La Cava — who is council president — have items before the City Council meeting on January 27, excusing them from attending council meetings.

La Cava gives specific dates, Campbell does not.

Given Jen’s general lack of concern for residents of District 2 and her absence from District matters, this open- ended recuse from some/ all/ unspecified meetings is troublesome.

Continue Reading Reader Rant: ‘Why Is Jen Campbell Asking for an Open-Ended Recusal from City Council Meetings?’

Petition Started to Oppose Paving of OB and Point Loma’s Historic Dirt Alleys

 Source  January 22, 2026  7 Comments on Petition Started to Oppose Paving of OB and Point Loma’s Historic Dirt Alleys


New Petition

We, the undersigned residents of Sunset Cliffs Park, oppose the unnecessary paving of our historic dirt alleys. These alleys have remained unpaved for over 50 years, preserving the unique charm, environmental benefits, and walkability of our neighborhood.

Why We Oppose Paving:

Continue Reading Petition Started to Oppose Paving of OB and Point Loma’s Historic Dirt Alleys

Car Crashes into Tattoo Shop in Northeast Ocean Beach

 Staff  January 22, 2026  0 Comments on Car Crashes into Tattoo Shop in Northeast Ocean Beach

The San Diego Police Department confirmed that a car crashed into a tattoo shop in northeast Ocean Beach on Wednesday afternoon, January 21, around 4:52 p.m.

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Former Mayor of Coronado Sermonizing About San Diego’s Woes Falls Flat Given His Own Record

 Source  January 22, 2026  56 Comments on Former Mayor of Coronado Sermonizing About San Diego’s Woes Falls Flat Given His Own Record

by Michael Zucchet / Voice of San Diego / January 21, 2026

In his Jan. 13 op-ed published in Voice of San Diego, former Coronado Mayor Richard Bailey argues that increased spending and poor management are the real culprits of the city of San Diego’s budget woes.

But in many of the issue areas that Bailey cites (personnel and pension costs, lack of public safety spending and trash collection fees) San Diego is in line with or even outperforming other cities – including the city of Coronado under Bailey’s leadership as councilmember and mayor for 12 years:

  • According to the Census Bureau, the city of San Diego’s population steadily grew more than 7 percent between 2010 and 2024 to 1,404,000. During the same period, the population of Coronado decreased 5 percent to 18,000. Despite this decline in residents, Coronado’s general fund personnel budget rose 89 percent from FY 2014 (Mr. Bailey’s first full fiscal year in office) to FY 2026.  During the same period – with a rising population – San Diego’s general fund personnel expenditures rose 76 percent. Coronado has one city employee for every 70 residents; San Diego has one employee for every 107 residents.
Continue Reading Former Mayor of Coronado Sermonizing About San Diego’s Woes Falls Flat Given His Own Record

Residents and Locals Not Happy With Plan to Create One Lane on Sunset Cliffs Blvd. to Fight Erosion

 Source  January 22, 2026  5 Comments on Residents and Locals Not Happy With Plan to Create One Lane on Sunset Cliffs Blvd. to Fight Erosion

By Dave Schwab / Times of San Diego / Jan. 21, 2026

Last September, the City Council unanimously passed a Coastal Resilience Master Plan, adopting nature-based solutions to flooding and erosion risks.

The CRMP was adopted to counteract the effects of climate change on six pilot sites in Ocean Beach, Pacific Beach, Mission Beach and La Jolla.

City spokesperson Peter Kelly noted that the four project sites moving forward under Phase 2 are Tourmaline Beach in PB, Dog Beach in Ocean Beach, the Ocean Beach beachfront and Sunset Cliffs.

“Phase 2 is fully grant-funded through a State Coastal Conservancy grant,” said Kelly. “Work will be completed in January 2027…. This work will also include determining a rough order of magnitude for construction costs for each of the Phase 2 project sites.”

Sunset Cliffs’ plans include developing a separated pedestrian path, removing west side parking, and creating one lane for southbound vehicular travel on Sunset Cliffs Boulevard.

Responding to that roadway-altering proposal, Leon Scales, chair of the Sunset Cliffs Natural Park Council overseeing Sunset Cliffs’ future development, offered an anecdote.

Scales said someone told him recently that they “would love to live on it (Sunset Cliffs Boulevard).” Scales asked, “If you did, would you be concerned that ‘cliff retreat’ would threaten your home and investment?”

The man responded that he would be dead before a cliff collapse occurred that was serious enough to affect his home, and added that he’d be much more worried if he lived on a street above the boulevard after it became a one-way passage, with all the reverse-direction traffic — and parking — in front of his house.

Continue Reading Residents and Locals Not Happy With Plan to Create One Lane on Sunset Cliffs Blvd. to Fight Erosion

Paid Parking: Balboa Park’s Death Spiral?

 Kate Callen  January 21, 2026  16 Comments on Paid Parking: Balboa Park’s Death Spiral?

By Kate Callen

Balboa Park’s institutional stewards joined forces to denounce Mayor Todd Gloria’s paid parking fees in a January 21 press conference that delivered ominous news about the fees’ early impacts.

The 19 park leaders were brought together by the Balboa Park Cultural Partnership to announce a new website, that will serve as a portal for pressuring the City Council to shelve the fees.

The leaders stopped short of demanding a total repeal. They chose a milder stance: “to express our serious concerns and go on record requesting the reconsideration of the vote supporting paid parking.”

But they did (finally) challenge Gloria’s hype that the new fees will go straight into overdue park maintenance. And they would not rule out the idea of a public-private partnership, modeled after the New York City Central Park Conservancy, that would wrest management of the park away from City Hall.

“I think our community should and can have that larger discussion,” said Peter Comiskey, the partnership’s Executive Director.

Early data on attendance and revenue have borne out dire predictions that paid parking will drive away the visitors who keep the park solvent.

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Calls Grow to Invoke 25th Amendment as Trump’s Poor Mental State Becomes Explicitly Obvious After His Deranged Efforts to Seize Greenland

 Frank Gormlie  January 21, 2026  1 Comment on Calls Grow to Invoke 25th Amendment as Trump’s Poor Mental State Becomes Explicitly Obvious After His Deranged Efforts to Seize Greenland

There are more and more calls to invoke the Constitution’s 25th Amendment as Donald Trump’s poor mental state becomes more and more obvious. These calls have accelerated since Trump’s deranged statements and efforts to seize Greenland. The 25th Amendment allows for the removal of a president if certain substantive criteria are met.

As Josh Fiallo at the  Daily Beast on Jan. 20 reported

Trump, 79, posted 33 times in 45 minutes on Tuesday [Jan.20], claiming he “has done more for NATO” than anyone and sharing conspiracies about Dominion voting machines, non-existent voter fraud, and a clip of his 2017 Inaugural address, among other things.

The flood of posts, which come as he threatens to shatter relations with longstanding European allies by demanding that the United States seize Greenland from Denmark, immediately renewed calls for his removal from power.

Former Republican Rep. Adam Kinzinger asked on BlueSky, “Are we watching a real-time mental health crisis with Trump?” shortly after Trump’s mad barrage ended. “Seriously.” …

Continue Reading Calls Grow to Invoke 25th Amendment as Trump’s Poor Mental State Becomes Explicitly Obvious After His Deranged Efforts to Seize Greenland