OB Woman’s Club Continues Legacy of Philanthropy with Awards Ceremony

 Frank Gormlie  January 16, 2026  0 Comments on OB Woman’s Club Continues Legacy of Philanthropy with Awards Ceremony

By Jillian Butler

On Monday, January 12th, the Ocean Beach Woman’s Club (OBWC) held their annual awards ceremony spearheaded by their Philanthropy and Social Justice Committee (PSJ). During this ceremony, PSJ chairwoman Paula Boyd bestowed multiple charities with checks of money that the club fundraised during the 2025 year. This year’s beneficiaries were:

  • Just in Time for Foster Youth,
  • Peninsula Community Senior Center,
  • Community Connections Program,
  • San Diego Humane Society, and
  • a high school scholarship program.

Ms. Boyd praised the organizations, saying, “The organizations that we honor tonight are the ones who stop and help. Their dedicated staff and volunteers bring compassion and expertise to their work. They provide housing, counseling, and medical care for people in need, as well as their animal companions.”

Over 80 people were in attendance at the ceremony, enjoying wine, charcuterie, and honoring the work of the OBWC over the past year. This ceremony also served as the first general meeting of the year.

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‘One Battle After Another’ Is in One Scene After Another in San Diego

 Source  January 16, 2026  0 Comments on ‘One Battle After Another’ Is in One Scene After Another in San Diego

By Wild Oscar / Escondido Grapevine / January 12, 2026

One Battle After Another,” the new Warner Bros. picture written and directed by Paul Thomas Anderson and starring Leonardo DiCaprio, opened recently— and it doesn’t merely visit San Diego. It moves in, rearranges the furniture, and leaves its footprints all over the place.

Last year the production spent roughly six weeks roaming the region with cameras and cables, collecting scenery the way tourists collect fridge magnets. Border areas. Otay Mesa. Borrego Springs. Downtown. If you squint during the trailers, you can practically hear the local traffic reports.

“Definitely when you see this on the big screen, you’re going to see a lot of San Diego in it,” said Guy Langman, the city’s film program manager, sounding like a man who’s already spotted familiar palm trees in the rushes.

The county, never one to waste a good ledger entry, says the shoot pumped nearly $7 million into the local economy—hotels, catering, wages for extras and crew, and assorted cinematic odds and ends that don’t usually show up on a tourist brochure.

The filmmakers, meanwhile, were not motivated solely by sunshine and civic pride. California’s tax credits played their part.

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Stan Levin — Leader of San Diego’s Vets for Peace and Supporter of Homeless — Has Passed

 Source  January 16, 2026  2 Comments on Stan Levin — Leader of San Diego’s Vets for Peace and Supporter of Homeless — Has Passed

By Pam Kragen / San Diego Union-Tribune / Jan. 14 -15, 2026

Stan Levin, a Korean War veteran who spent the later years of his life as a passionate anti-war activist and helping San Diego’s homeless population, passed away Jan. 8 at a local hospital. He was 96.

The longtime San Diegan worked as an acrobat, in airplane manufacturing, as a schoolteacher and in the real estate industry. But he became best known for his volunteer work with San Diego Veterans for Peace, a vocation that began around his 80th birthday in 2010. He participated in demonstrations, protested at the Miramar air shows, spoke at public events and wrote many essays and letters to the editor that were published in this and other local newspapers and on news sites.

Levin’s daughter Annie Revel said her father loved talking to people on virtually any topic, but over the past 20 years he increasingly became an outspoken anti-war activist.

“He was opinionated and very engaged in life,” Revel said. “He always had a twinkle in his eye and he had a great sense of fun. He was very curious and inquisitive and always learning.”

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State-Of-The-City by Mayor Gloria: Playing the Part vs. Doing the Job

 Kate Callen  January 16, 2026  11 Comments on State-Of-The-City by Mayor Gloria: Playing the Part vs. Doing the Job

By Kate Callen

San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria’s 2026 “State of the City” address began hitting turbulence on January 14, the day before he delivered it.

His long-time ally Voice of San Diego (VOSD) shocked the city that morning with a takedown of the mayor’s leadership. Will Huntsberry’s “Disappointment Follows Gloria Into Sixth Year” described an executive in free fall with few achievements and fewer friends.

Later that day, word filtered out that the City Council would hold a special meeting at 1:00 p.m., two hours before Gloria’s speech, to allow public comment on a talk that hadn’t yet been given.

The hastily arranged meeting was sparsely attended. Most speakers railed against Immigration and Customs Enforcement abuses, entirely off topic, but Council President Joe La Cava allowed it.

The few speakers who stayed on topic echoed themes in the VOSD article: The mayor has lost the people’s trust. He has squandered money on expensive hires. He prefers cutting ribbons to carrying out tough decisions.

When Gloria stepped to the podium, he was under intense pressure to give a pivotal speech. Would he squarely face the challenges that plague his city? Or would he spin his record, carp about obstacles, and weave a rosy picture of the future?

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In Annual Address, Mayor Gloria Doubles Down on Civic Center, Midway Rising and His Record

 Source  January 16, 2026  2 Comments on In Annual Address, Mayor Gloria Doubles Down on Civic Center, Midway Rising and His Record

By David Garrick / San Diego Union-Tribune / Jan. 16, 2026

San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria said Thursday he will aggressively pursue a new sports arena project despite legal challenges and will revive plans to transform the downtown Civic Center, starting with new college classrooms.

Delivering his sixth annual State of the City address, the mayor also announced that San Diego had permitted 7,500 new homes in 2025 — the third year in a row that permits have been nearly twice the city’s long-term average.

The mayor also said he would try to increase national focus on the housing crisis this year as president of the U.S. Conference of Mayors, the first time San Diego has led that group.

Gloria’s annual speech, delivered at City Hall on Thursday afternoon, touched on familiar themes but offered less ambitious proposals than he had made in addresses earlier in his mayoralty.

And as in last year’s speech, he continued to urge other government agencies to help San Diego solve its problems.

He called on Caltrans to expand efforts to clear homeless encampments under freeways. He called on the state to better fund a crackdown on retail theft. And he again called on the county to address the mental illness and addiction problems that he said contribute to the city’s homelessness crisis.

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Mayor Gloria Has Been a ‘Disappointment’ to His Allies and Supporters

 Source  January 15, 2026  12 Comments on Mayor Gloria Has Been a ‘Disappointment’ to His Allies and Supporters

Editordude: The following is a ground-breaking sweeping review and analysis of Todd Gloria’s tenure as mayor by one of his long-time allies and supporters, the Voice of San Diego. It really is a remarkable piece by Will Huntsberry — and it touches on just about every scandal and misstep by Gloria — so it’s clearly welcomed by those longtime critics of Gloria — like the Rag.

What it doesn’t do, however, is delve into the corruption angle of Gloria’s administration, such as awarding the contract for the redevelopment of the Midway Sports Arena area — a huge, gigantic project — to his top campaign contributor, the manager of Midway Rising. Nor does it examine how a Gloria-backed PAC exercised voter suppression efforts against a fellow Democrat running for City Council. It’s a rather long piece, so sit back and relax — no, no, sit back and get pissed off. 

by Will Huntsberry / Voice of San Diego / January 14, 2026

In early 2020, the future was bright for Todd Gloria. Gloria hadn’t been elected yet, but his campaign was cooking and it seemed he held all the cards to become San Diego’s next mayor.

He convened a kitchen cabinet — an unofficial group of advisers — at a political consultant’s office downtown. Gloria sat at the head of the table and the group had heady discussions about his future.

At the time, he was San Diego’s shining son. Affable, polished and able to work a room like few other politicians. Child of a gardener and a hotel maid. First-generation college graduate. And soon he would be the first openly queer, non-White person elected mayor. Gloria had an amazing story to tell – and the assembled team was there to decide how to tell it.

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Balboa Park Museums Report Drop in Attendance — As Much as 25% — After Paid Parking Rollout

 Source  January 15, 2026  2 Comments on Balboa Park Museums Report Drop in Attendance — As Much as 252 — After Paid Parking Rollout

By Dani Miskell / 10News / Jan 13, 2026

Museums in Balboa Park report a drop in attendance following the rollout of new paid-parking regulations.

The San Diego Natural History Museum, which hosted the first Free Tuesday of January, coinciding with the parking system launch, has seen significant decreases in visitor numbers during what is traditionally one of the park’s most popular programs.

“We’re concerned because we’ve seen a drop off in numbers. We’re down by about 25%,” said Judy Gradwohl, President and CEO of the San Diego Natural History Museum.

Free Tuesdays have been a longstanding tradition at Balboa Park, with museums taking turns offering free admission to visitors. However, the new paid-parking requirement appears to be deterring attendance, despite free museum access.

“We’ve only been in the first week of the parking regulations, but we’re getting a lot of negative feedback from members, from visitors, people in the community, anywhere I go, that’s all anybody wants to talk about,” Gradwohl said.

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Trial Begins in Point Loma Murder Case

 Source  January 15, 2026  0 Comments on Trial Begins in Point Loma Murder Case

William Bushey Is Accused of Killing Sister, Nephew and Wounding 86-Year Old Mother on Zola Street

By Ben J. Costas / hoodline /  January 13, 2026

[Please see original for links to media]

A San Diego jury yesterday, January 12, began hearing a chilling Point Loma murder case, as opening statements kicked off the trial of 61-year-old William Bushey. Prosecutors say Bushey shot and killed his sister, Laurie Robinson, 61, and her son, Brett Robinson, 33, and seriously wounded his 86-year-old mother, June Bushey, inside the family’s Zola Street home in August 2024. Jurors are now weighing two starkly different narratives of what led to the bloodshed.

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California Officially Bans Plastic Bags

 Source  January 15, 2026  2 Comments on California Officially Bans Plastic Bags

By Jane Kim / 10NewsSanDiego / Jan. 11, 2026

California shoppers are adjusting to a new reality at checkout counters across the state as plastic bags have been officially banned since January 1.

The statewide prohibition, established under Senate Bill 1053, eliminates plastic bag options at grocery stores and retail locations, leaving customers with paper bags or their own reusable alternatives.

At Barons Market in Point Loma, the transition has been smooth according to both customers and staff. Customer Jim MacDonald said he typically brings his own bags but supports the environmental initiative.

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Coalition of Mayors Across San Diego County Join Push to Repeal Paid Parking at Balboa Park

 Source  January 15, 2026  1 Comment on Coalition of Mayors Across San Diego County Join Push to Repeal Paid Parking at Balboa Park

By Kelly Hessedal / CBS8 / January 12, 2026

Mayors from across San Diego County demanded Monday that San Diego city leaders repeal newly implemented parking fees at Balboa Park, citing fairness concerns, economic impact and a significant public backlash against the charges.

The coalition of mayors stand in support of activist Shane Harris’ proposal he drafted for the council calling for the parking fees to be repealed. Harris also said an online petition has gathered more than 1500 signatures.

The effort includes mayors from Coronado, Escondido, San Marcos, El Cajon and Chula Vista. It also includes council members from Del Mar and La Mesa. A news conference was held outside the Air and Space Museum Monday morning.

“Paying for parking to stay out and active is unacceptable,” said San Marcos Mayor Rebecca Jones.

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A Rundown and Review of Local Markets for Ocean Beach

 Staff  January 15, 2026  3 Comments on A Rundown and Review of Local Markets for Ocean Beach

By Csaba Petre

Following up on a thorough coffee tour of OB last year, I’m back to give a rundown and review of some local markets. I’ve chosen local stores (not huge chains, and not liquor-only stores) which can realistically qualify for at least a quick, missing-item type grocery trip. A couple of liquor-and-deli places have been added, if they met this criteria. Please feel free to add your favorite small store in the comments if I missed one you like.

Sunset Mini Mart

4799 Voltaire St, San Diego, CA 92107

Sunset Mini Mart is a convenience store and liquor store on the corner of Voltaire Street and Sunset Cliffs Blvd. They carry a wide assortment of snacks, as well as non-alcoholic drinks and sodas. As far as groceries they stock some basics: canned goods, cereals, coffee, and cleaning supplies. The store is clean and conveniently accessible for North OB.

Best for: snacks and drinks; a quick canned/boxed meal; liquor and beer

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Community and Labor Groups Call for General Strike in Minneapolis — ‘No Work, No School, No Shopping’ –Friday, Jan. 23

 Source  January 15, 2026  0 Comments on Community and Labor Groups Call for General Strike in Minneapolis — ‘No Work, No School, No Shopping’ –Friday, Jan. 23

By Brad Reed / Common Dreams / Jan. 14, 2026

A broad coalition of Minneapolis labor unions and community organizations is calling for a general strike to take place next week with the goal of forcing federal immigration agents to leave their city.

According to a report by Workday Magazine, the groups announced their plans on Tuesday to create a day of “no work, no school, no shopping” on Friday, January 23.

JaNaé Bates Imari, representative of the church Camphor Memorial UMC, said that next Friday would be “a day when every single Minnesotan who loves this state—who loves the idea of truth and freedom—will refuse to work, shop, and go to school.”

“We are asking every single person, every family member, every teacher, every bus driver, every childcare worker, to come together, to be in community, to stand with one another,” Bates Imari added.

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