Point Loma Residents Show Up and Force City to Postpone Palm Tree Chopping for Today – No Promises Made for Tomorrow
By Geoff Page
The actions of a collection of community residents early Thursday morning resulted in a temporary stay of execution for the historic palm trees on upper Newport Ave. The city had told a resident on Wednesday they would be back this morning at 7:30 a.m. to cut down the trees and they would be bringing the police. So, the locals rallied and showed up to voice very vocal opposition to the city steamrolling the community.
They did indeed bring the police.
Don’t Let Your Friends Decide Who Your Friends Are
By Edwin Decker
Dear Ed,
One of my acquaintances is a devoted Trump supporter. I don’t necessarily have a problem with that but some of my other friends are appalled by our relationship. They say that my friendship with him is a problem for them and that I should terminate if I want to continue being friends with them. I honestly don’t want to do that, but I am much closer to them and I frankly value their friendship more. Any suggestions?
Sincerely,
Sashona of Point Loma
Dear Sashona, when I was in 9th grade I befriended a kid who I will call Georgy Von Doofydork,
A Perfectly Legal Free-For-All at the Foot of Newport in OB
By John Williams
In 2018’s Senate Bill 946 the state of California eliminated penalties for unlicensed street vendors offering products to the public while on public property.
It’s nice, I guess, if you’ve got responsibilities and this is how you earn.
OB has for many years been known for its Wednesday Farmers Market which started as something much closer to a market with fruits and vegetables, coffee, honey, etc., than the repetitive hand-crafted variety of jewelry and other sideways stuff available now.
The Widder Curry: More Water Cut-Backs Will Kill My Fruit Trees While New Housing Developments Are Allowed to Grow
California’s Drought Emergency Extended to San Diego County
By Judi Curry
Here we go again. Another drought. Another curtailment of the use of water. The Governor is asking people to cutback on water usage 15% over last year.
My question is what about those of us that cut back 15% last year and are still cutting back? How much are we supposed to cut back
Point Loma Residents to Protest City Cutting Down Palm Trees – Thursday, Oct.21, 7:30am
For the last two mornings, city crews have been out in the Point Loma neighborhood attempting to remove Palm Trees that have been determined to “obstruct” aircraft flight paths and airspace.
No permits have been made, no traffic or parking control signs have been put up, no planning boards or neighborhoods informed. All in the name of “emergency” and public safety.
Rag writer Geoff Page reported on what has been going on:
Debate On Whether ‘Progress’ Has Been Made Over Jet Noise in OB, Point Loma and La Jolla
There’s currently a debate going on in the “pages” of the La Jolla Light over whether “progress” has been made regarding commercial jet noise, particularly over Point Loma and OB.
Anthony Stiegler, the co-founder and secretary of Quiet Skies La Jolla, wrote a piece on September 7 about the progress that has been made with the noise from aircraft.
Stiegler reported on the progress his group has made with the FAA and the County Airport Authority:
The Oil Spill is Bad. So is the Deadly Contamination You Can’t See or Smell
by Bart Ziegler, PhD / Voice of OC / Oct. 20, 2021
On the topic of environmental disasters, could you imagine trying to deal with contamination from a far deadlier kind of waste that you can’t see or smell and that remains toxic for hundreds of thousands of years?
As details of the Orange County oil spill continue to unfold, globs of tar are washing onto San Onofre State Beach beneath the shadow of a shuttered nuclear power plant where Southern California Edison is storing 3.6 million pounds of radioactive waste 100 feet from the ocean.
Reporting on the oil spill has us drawing comparisons and thinking about the state of nuclear waste safety.
Take corrosion, for instance.
City Forester Threatens Use of Police If Point Loma Residents Interfere With Cutting Down Palm Trees
City Forester: “We don’t care what you think.”
By Geoff Page
The City of San Diego is moving forward aggressively to cut down iconic and historic, tall palm trees on Newport Avenue, Santa Monica and Santa Barbara.
They are lying to the public saying it is because of a safety issue.
These are healthy trees — there is no safety issue whatsoever. But, when talking to the city’s forester, Brian Widener, it soon becomes clear that he is one of those people who believe if you repeat a lie over and over, people will eventually believe it is true. No matter how many times he says it is a safety issue, it is still not true.
The city is not only using public safety as an excuse, they are bypassing all the normal procedures for removing city trees by designating these as emergency removals. There is no emergency, the city just does not want to take the time to explain to the public why removals are necessary.
How to Survive the News
By Colleen O’Connor
Has the news begun to depress you? As in leaving you numb or emotionally defeated?
As in non-stop warnings of the COVID-19 pandemic morphing and being “always with us?”
Or the nightmarish headlines about ransomware attacks, daily mass shootings, supply chain shortages, or the overwhelming evidence of catastrophic climate change. All amid political amateur hour in our nation’s capitol?
If so, there is a remedy. Especially in San Diego. Simple. Step outside.









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