It Was a Bad Day for Jen Campbell: Replaced as Council President While Questions Raised Whether She Illegally Influenced Redistricting Process
Monday was a bad day for Jen Campbell. She was replaced as City Council president and a local watchdog group has asked the San Diego City Attorney’s Office to investigate whether she or her staff illegally influenced the ongoing process of redistricting – the drawing of new council districts.
As the Voice of San Diego reports:
San Diego City Council members decided not to re-elect their colleague Councilwoman Jen Campbell as Council president, Monday. She became the first Council president not to win at least a second term in the role since it was formed in 2006 when the city switched to the strong mayor form of government. Councilman Sean Elo-Rivera, who represents City Heights, Kensington and the College Area, took the position instead.
Study of Bike Use on 30th Street Demonstrates Fears and Predictions of Opponents: Less Business and Locals Unable to Find Parking
Kate Callen, a longtime North Park activist, performed a study of bicycle use along the contentious 30th Street corridor and its new bike lanes. She found that the fears and predictions of opponents of the bikepath project are true: there is less business and local residents are having a difficult time finding parking.
Callen took a careful count from security video of bike lane riders (bikes, scooters, skateboards) on the 3400 block of 30th Street during peak commuting times, between 7 a.m. and 9 a.m. and from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Monday, Oct. 4 through Friday, Oct. 8. Over the course of those 20 hours, the average number of riders per peak commuting hour was 16.
It Is Unacceptable That Only Left-Wing Counterprotesters Are Arrested From January Clash With Trump Supporters in Pacific Beach
On January 9 this year, when Trump was still calling himself “president” and just 3 days after the Trump-inspired violent insurrection at the Capitol, pro-Trump supporters held a rally in Pacific Beach.
This was a time when Trump was still trying to overturn President Joe Biden’s election victory and about one hundred Trump supporters showed up in PB for a so-called “Patriot March.”
And roughly 100 counterprotesters also showed up. Many of these were Americans sickened by the Capitol insurrection attempt and by Trump’s continued refusal to admit defeat. Clashes did break out that Saturday afternoon between the Trumpists and the counterprotesters. San Diego Police Department were also in attendance and eventually declared an unlawful assembly — but it only applied to the counterprotesters.
My Abortion Stories
By K-B Gressitt / Blog / December 5, 2021
At 18, I had an IUD. One day, mid-coitus, my partner yelped. An embryo had spurned the device. Ouch.
Mother took me to the hospital, then brought me home, tucked me in, and fed me sweet and savory support.
At 19, I tried being a party girl. Didn’t like it. Or the host who climbed on top and fucked my barely conscious body.
I took myself to Planned Parenthood, raged in humiliated silence, swore a life of celibacy.
The Pandemic and the Continuing Attack on Democracy and Public Education
By Thomas Ultican / Tultican / November 30, 2021
Nancy MacLean’s amazing book Democracy in Chains documents Charles Koch’s anti-democratic and anti-public education agenda plus his relationship with Nobel Prize winning economist James Buchanan (Democracy in Chains page 184).
She quotes Buchanan speaking about their shared libertarian agenda, “The project must aim toward the practical removal of the sacrosanct assigned to majority rule.” MacLean writes of Buchanan, “The collective enemy he was constructing included nearly everyone in education except academic economists” (Democracy in Chains page 119).
Mike James: Change in Venue of Annual Auction for OB Food & Toy Drive — Saturday, Dec. 11
By Mike James / Facebook / Dec. 6, 2021
Proud of the legacy my brothers and I have created in Ocean Beach. It has also been a lot of fun. I had a blast announcing the parade again this past Saturday.
Next Saturday I will once again be an auctioneer to raise money for the O.B. Food and Toy Drive.
There is a change of venue and date this year for the first time in 42 years. Plus the format will be quite a departure from previous auctions. It will start at 6 pm Saturday December 11th at The Holding Company. Previously it was the Thursday before the parade at the Sunshine Company Saloon. It will be sad to no longer be at the Sunshine where it has been held since 1980.
In Tentative Ruling, Judge Sides With ‘Save Our Access’: 2020 Ballot Measure E’s Removal of 30-Foot Height Limit in Midway Was Illegal
Residents of the Midway District, as well as others in OB and Point Loma took a sigh of relief Friday upon the news that a San Diego judge made a tentative ruling against the 2020 ballot Measure E that eviscerated the 30-foot height limit in the Midway.
Superior Court Judge Katherine Bacal agreed with petitioner Save Our Access in her tentative ruling that the city should be barred from implementing Measure E. Judge Bacal ruled that the City of San Diego improperly placed the measure on the November 2020 ballot because the city failed to study the environmental impacts of buildings taller than 30-feet, as required by the California Environmental Quality Act.
OB Tenants on Orchard Complain of Mistreatment by Property Management Company

See Update Below
By Dave Schwab / Peninsula Beacon / Dec. 3, 2021
After receiving a 60-day notice to vacate, tenants in an Ocean Beach apartment complex are complaining of improper treatment by their management company, which they claim is forging ahead with remodeling plans to their detriment before they’re out.
The dispute is between residents in the two-building apartment complex at 4802 Orchard Ave. and their property manager, Lifestyle Property Management Group, Inc.
Que Vivan Las Mujeres!
by Ernie McCray
As I listened to
my friend and hero,
Berenice Badillo,
talk about her art
in Chicano Park
a few days ago,
her mural,
“No Human Being is Illegal,”
that was born in her soul,
I hadn’t expected to
hear about
the plight of women
in the Chicano movement
December 3: City to Release Non-Toxic Red Dye Into Mission Bay to Study Water Circulation
The City of San Diego will release fluorescent red dye into Mission Bay on Dec. 3 to study water circulation as part of a larger environmental project. Data will help the City design future water quality improvements and ecological restoration projects at the bay.
The nontoxic dye will be visible for about a week. It is made of rhodamine and is safe for use in drinking water and salt water. The dye will naturally become absorbed into the bay and is not expected to leave any residue on beaches or have any other long-term effects.
New Group Emerges to Bid on Sports Arena Redevelopment
By Jennifer Van Grove / San Diego Union-Tribune / Dec. 2, 2021
A new team emphasizing strong ties to San Diego has surfaced in the do-over competition to remake the 48 acres of city-owned land near Pechanga Arena San Diego in the Midway District.
Developer Zephyr Partners has partnered with sports-and-entertainment venue operator Legends and affordable-housing builder Chelsea Investment Corp. to submit a bid for the property’ that includes more than 1,000 subsidized units, 29 acres of parks and public space, and a new arena.







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