End of the Year Thoughts from Coastal Caretakers
FROM COASTAL CARETAKERS
Ring out the old year, ring in the new! Coastal Caretakers appreciate what all of you have done in the past to keep major developers out of Ocean Beach.
However, the City of San Diego has a new attack underway: to remove the protection we now have by declaring that the Ocean Beach Historic District is not a District. One response is to cave in, give up. They, the powers at the State and City, have all the balls in their court, and they can bounce them around any way they want. They can rewrite the law, law they wrote in the first place and got it wrong.
The one or two minutes per person we get during public comment is for a decision that our elected officials have already made. But we are OB! Ocean Beach IS a Complete Community! We will be there once again to let the city and developers know one thing: We will not go away. No to 23-story buildings on Point Loma Ave without adequate parking spaces! No to Lower Voltaire Skyscrapers! And NO to an all-new Newport Avenue. OBceans will be there to protect our Historic District.
We want to take this time to remind you where we have been and where it is going, and WHY we need to get the attention of City Hall. Here is a summary:
August 29, 2024, Coastal Caretakers and friends won our appeal to the Planning Commission, and the 20-unit building designed by Galba Architects never happened. Bad press tried to imply we were NIMBYs and wanted that corner to remain in its current state of disrepair, earning us the title bestowed on all objectors.

By South OB Girl
Trump bombs Venezuelan land for first time: Is war imminent?
By Angelo Haynes
Charles, or “Sibee” as his friends call him, had the idea for creating the micro farm after having a vision while standing on the top of the hill behind his childhood home.
Note: Author’s views do not necessarily reflect the views of the OB Rag.
By Kate Callen
By Geoff Page
Here’s a bunch of seemingly unrelated articles that have been sitting in my “in-basket” for a while — some for months. Yet, they deserve attention –so here they are:
The remains of a grand hotel and social hall are the only recognizable infrastructure left of the failed town, which is visible even from the highway — if you don’t blink. The foundations of other nearby buildings sink into the ground, faded blue and purple graffiti covering the splintering stone, the lettering disappearing into low concrete walls. From the middle of the ruins, trailers and warehouse structures under the power lines jolt you back to the modern day from any dreams of early 1900s life.
Here is a 
Edited From JP Theberge
by Ernie McCray




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