December 2025 Events for San Diego from the Ocean Beach Green Center

 Source  December 1, 2025  1 Comment on December 2025 Events for San Diego from the Ocean Beach Green Center

Every Saturday at 10:30 am. San Diego Climate Mobilization Coalition Meetings December 6th, 13th, 20th, and 27th.

Every Saturday 10 am – 12 pm Peace Vigil for Palestine
The San Diego River Park Foundation has volunteer opportunities in Ocean Beach: Point Loma Native Plant Garden Club on the 2nd and 4th Sundays
Every Sunday 2 pm – 4 pm Occupy Otay Sunday Action Otay Mesa Detention Center

December 1st Monday  12 pm – 1 pm Interfaith Vigil For Earth Justice
December 1st Monday 4 pm – 6 pm The Courage to Connect:
December 1st Monday We Ain’t Buying It

December 2nd. Tuesday 6 pm – 9 pm Community Craft & Film Night Fundraiser
December 3rd. Wednesday 5 pm Santa’s Clean Air Workshop:  Holiday Crafts for a Healthy Portside
December 3rd. Wednesday 10 am- 11am Celebrate Without the Waste: Sustainable Holidays Webinar
December 3rd. Wednesday 5 pm – 8 pm Salty Cinema Fall 2025: Tides of Renewal.

December 4th Thursday 6 pm – 8 pm Protecting Southern California from Offshore Oil and Gas Drilling
December 5th Friday 6 pm Film Night “The Great Debaters”  Event by Black Panther Party of San Diego
December 6th Saturday 1 pm – 3:30 pm Party for the Planet

December 6th 12 pm – 3 pm Active Duty Coffee Talk
December 6th Saturday 11 am – 2 pm Friends and Neighbors Holiday River Celebration & Art Market
December 6th Saturday 1:30 pm – 3:30 pm Mission Beach Community Climate Conversation

December 7th Sunday 12:30 pm- 3 pm South Bay Community Climate Conversation
December 7th Sunday 9:30 am  – 10:30 am Ramona Wildlife Center Tour

Continue Reading December 2025 Events for San Diego from the Ocean Beach Green Center

How Midway Rising Developers Plan to Sidestep Requirements and Avoid the 30-Foot Height Limit

 Source  December 1, 2025  3 Comments on How Midway Rising Developers Plan to Sidestep Requirements and Avoid the 30-Foot Height Limit

Strategy hinges on California’s density bonus law, which empowers builders to secure waivers to avoid development requirements

By Jennifer Van Grove / San Diego Union-Tribune / November 28, 2025 

A recent court order directing the reinstatement of the 30-foot height limit in San Diego’s Midway District would seem to stop short a development team’s plan to remake the city’s sports arena site with thousands of apartments and a replacement venue in buildings that tower over the restriction.

But the ruling’s net effect on the megaproject may only amount to a short-term, bureaucratic delay. That’s because the Midway Rising team believes it has something more powerful on its side: California’s density bonus law.

“Midway Rising is moving forward as planned under state density bonus law that encourages affordable housing development,” said Jeff Meyer, a spokesperson for the development team. “We have full confidence in this transformative redevelopment and look forward to working with our local and state partners to bring the vision put forward in the Midway Community Plan to life.”

The team expects the project will be considered by the City Council in early 2026, he said.

The posture of strength suggests that the city and the development team, tied together by an exclusive negotiation agreement, have not labored in vain.

Continue Reading How Midway Rising Developers Plan to Sidestep Requirements and Avoid the 30-Foot Height Limit

Clairemont Community Plan Okayed by Council Committee — Would Add 20,000 Units, 40,000 Residents and Wipe Out Height Limits

 Source  November 26, 2025  3 Comments on Clairemont Community Plan Okayed by Council Committee — Would Add 20,000 Units, 40,000 Residents and Wipe Out Height Limits

By David Garrick / San Diego Union-Tribune / November 22-24, 2025

An aggressive plan to add nearly 20,000 potential new homes to Clairemont over the next 30 years got a key green light Friday when the City Council’s Land Use and Housing Committee unanimously approved it.

The new growth blueprint for Clairemont — the oldest and largest of San Diego’s suburban neighborhoods — also includes a new fire station, new parks and a possible new trolley station at Jutland Drive and Morena Boulevard.

The blueprint, which could boost the neighborhood’s population from the current 80,000 to about 119,000, also shrinks vehicle lanes on Morena Boulevard and Genesee Avenue to make way for bicycle-only and bus-only lanes.

There are also some ambitious goals like aerial tramways over Interstate 5 to connect Clairemont to coastal areas, and a missing link hiking trail that would connect Marian Bear Park and Tecolote Park.

And the neighborhood’s 30-foot building height limit would be wiped out in many areas to allow high-rise and mid-rise buildings that would range in height from 40 feet to 65 feet.

Continue Reading Clairemont Community Plan Okayed by Council Committee — Would Add 20,000 Units, 40,000 Residents and Wipe Out Height Limits

Key City Council Committee Approves College Area Plan that Calls for 300% Population Increase

 Source  November 26, 2025  2 Comments on Key City Council Committee Approves College Area Plan that Calls for 3002 Population Increase

Campillo Is Lone Vote Against Approval

By Maura Fox / San Diego Union-Tribune / November 24, 2025

A development blueprint that plans for tripling the population of the College Area over the next 30 years is one step closer to being adopted, after a San Diego City Council committee voted to approve the update.

The community plan, which hasn’t seen an update since 1989, will guide land use and development for the neighborhood for the next two to three decades. It will now head to the full City Council for review.

It projects ambitious population growth in the College Area and expects more opportunities for cycling and public transit, green spaces along busy streets and a campus town center near San Diego State University.

“I’m excited to see how, outside this plan update, we can work to make those recommendations a reality for the community,” Councilmember Sean Elo-Rivera, whose District 9 includes the area, said at Friday’s meeting of the Land Use and Housing Committee.

The plan update passed 3-1, with Councilmember Raul Campillo, who represents nearby District 7, voting no.

Continue Reading Key City Council Committee Approves College Area Plan that Calls for 300% Population Increase

OB Lifeguards Refuse to Give Up and Make Harrowing Rescue of Black Lab 3/4s of Mile Offshore

 Source  November 26, 2025  3 Comments on OB Lifeguards Refuse to Give Up and Make Harrowing Rescue of Black Lab 3/4s of Mile Offshore

From CBS8 / Nov. 25, 2025

Brandon Valdez and Alexis Barcellos held their 5-year-old black lab mix a little tighter after a harrowing rescue Sunday at Dog Beach in Ocean Beach. “You don’t want to overwhelm her, but you just want to hug her, squeeze her,” Valdez said.

Sadie is still recovering after she bolted from the couple’s Point Loma Airbnb near the Barnes Tennis Center on Sunday afternoon. An AirTag on her collar led the family straight to Dog Beach.

“Her sister ran out the door too. Remy came right back. Sadie just kept going. She was on a mission,” Barcellos said. By the time they arrived, Sadie had been swept into the channel where the current was strong.

“I just had a surfer run up to the truck. He’s saying there’s a dog on the jetty,” a lifeguard said over the radio. San Diego lifeguards and the Coast Guard swarmed the area. Lifeguards Garrett Smerdon and Jack Alldredge searched by jet ski in difficult conditions.

“There was a little bit of swell, and the sun was at our backs, so we faced east to have the best chance of spotting something,” Smerdon said.

Continue Reading OB Lifeguards Refuse to Give Up and Make Harrowing Rescue of Black Lab 3/4s of Mile Offshore

New San Diego Lawsuit Targets ICE for Violating Due Process by Making Immigrants Targets After Court Hearings

 Source  November 26, 2025  0 Comments on New San Diego Lawsuit Targets ICE for Violating Due Process by Making Immigrants Targets After Court Hearings

From Fox5 San Diego / November 25, 2025

A class action lawsuit filed on Tuesday alleges Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) of violating due process by targeting people after court proceedings in San Diego County.

Represented by the Center for Immigration Law and Policy (CILP) at UCLA’s School of Law and the Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Law (CHRCL), three detained immigrants filed the lawsuit.

“Entrapping and imprisoning people who are complying with their immigration requirements isn’t just cowardly, it’s unconstitutional,” CHRCL Legal Director Bardis Vakili said via a press release. “Due process requires that, before taking away our freedom, the government must prove at a hearing that detention is justified.”

Throughout the summer, ICE targeted people leaving court hearings at 880 Front Street, according to the lawsuit.

Continue Reading New San Diego Lawsuit Targets ICE for Violating Due Process by Making Immigrants Targets After Court Hearings

Why Are San Diego Councilmembers Behaving So Erratically?

 Source  November 26, 2025  26 Comments on Why Are San Diego Councilmembers Behaving So Erratically?

San Diego City Council Committees Disrespect the Public

By Paul Krueger

Twice in one week, City Council Committees demonstrated blatant disregard for public interest and input on important issues.

At the November 19 Council Rules Committee meeting, Kent Lee was absent, and Vivian Moreno and Sean Elo-Rivera abruptly walked out — with no explanation — before the meeting ended.

Their absence deprived the Committee of a quorum, ending discussion and a committee decision on a proposed ballot measure calling for free Sunday parking in Balboa Park.

That proposal by Shane Harris was endorsed by several members of the public, who testified in person and by phone.

The Committee’s failure to finish its work could jeopardize Harris’ proposal, because there is a strict timeline for the council to review citizen-proposed ballot measures, and the Rules Committee isn’t scheduled to meet again until January.

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Donna Frye: ‘How High Could the Buildings Be In Clairemont?’ Part 2

 Source  November 26, 2025  4 Comments on Donna Frye: ‘How High Could the Buildings Be In Clairemont?’ Part 2

By Donna Frye

On November 13, I sent an email to the city requesting information about how high the buildings could be in Clairemont if the Community Plan Update is approved, taking into account the State Density Bonus Law and Senate Bill 79 (SB79).

On November 21, the OB Rag published this as part of my ongoing requests to the city for some answers.

This is Part 2 which is my progress to date. In case you’re wondering why this even matters, it’s because we have the right to know what’s going on in our communities. And even though my question is about a specific community, the height limits and many other development issues, are not unique to Clairemont.

On November 21, I received the following email response to my question from the city:

“Under SB79, development would be allowed at 65 feet in height if within 1/4 mile of a trolley stop, and up to 55 feet in height if within 1/2 mile of a trolley stop, which is generally consistent with the 65-foot height limits in the overlay zone. Regarding other development incentive programs, both at the state and local level, projects that include affordable housing may also be eligible to receive development incentives and waivers that could allow a project to further exceed these height limits.”

Continue Reading Donna Frye: ‘How High Could the Buildings Be In Clairemont?’ Part 2

Councilmember Campillo Explains His Opposition to Appealing the 30-Foot Height Limit Ruling

 Source  November 24, 2025  5 Comments on Councilmember Campillo Explains His Opposition to Appealing the 30-Foot Height Limit Ruling

By Paul Krueger

Before City Councilmembers adjourned to Closed Session on November 17 to discuss and vote on the controversial 30-foot height limit in the Midway/Pacific Highway area, I asked them to disclose after that meeting why they voted as they did.

I told our representatives they owed the public an on-the-record explanation on this very important land use and housing density issue.

I didn’t ask — or expect them — to reveal any “privileged” information discussed in Closed Session, including legal strategies, the odds of winning or losing an appeal to the State Supreme Court, or the possible cost of that litigation.

But I told councilmembers that their constituents deserve to know if they agree with Mayor Todd Gloria and City Attorney Heather Ferber’s harsh criticism of the recent appellate court decision that reinstated the 30-foot height limit. And if so, did they support the Mayor and City Attorney’s strategy of asking the State Supreme Court to reverse the appeals court and allow high-rise construction without a more thorough review of the negative environmental impact of that density?

Continue Reading Councilmember Campillo Explains His Opposition to Appealing the 30-Foot Height Limit Ruling

Two Women Seriously Injured in Possible DUI Crash in Point Loma

 Source  November 24, 2025  2 Comments on Two Women Seriously Injured in Possible DUI Crash in Point Loma

Two women were seriously injured when their vehicle crashed into a concrete wall in Point Loma, Thursday night, November 20.

San Diego Police Officers responded around 10:10 p.m. that night where apparently a 39-year-old woman traveling west in a 2025 Mercedes GLC SUV drove into the wall at Womble Road and Rosecrans Street.

Continue Reading Two Women Seriously Injured in Possible DUI Crash in Point Loma

Roadblocks Mount to Waymo Coming to San Diego

 Source  November 24, 2025  2 Comments on Roadblocks Mount to Waymo Coming to San Diego

By Rob Nikolewski / San Diego Union-Tribune / November 20, 2025

The pathway for robotaxis in San Diego may have hit a pothole.

[Please see original for all the great links.]

Just weeks after officials at the autonomous vehicle company Waymo announced early steps to bring its ride-hailing services to San Diego in 2026, the Taxi Advisory Committee at the Metropolitan Transit System came out in opposition to driverless vehicles.

“My chief concern is what this means for people who are keeping a roof over their head and feeding their families by being drivers,” said San Diego City Councilmember Sean Elo-Rivera, who is also chair of the Taxi Advisory Committee.

Continue Reading Roadblocks Mount to Waymo Coming to San Diego

Former 1970’s Hotel in Point Loma, Now Being Refurbished, Will Offer Studios and One-Bedroom Apartments

 Frank Gormlie  November 24, 2025  16 Comments on Former 1970’s Hotel in Point Loma, Now Being Refurbished, Will Offer Studios and One-Bedroom Apartments

By San Diego Business Journal / Nov. 2025

A former Point Loma hotel that closed in 2019 and has been vacant ever since is being redeveloped into apartments in a $23 million project by Ambient Communities and C2 Building Group.

“It struggled as a hotel in Point Loma because there are thousands of hotel rooms in Point Loma right along the water,” according to Robert Horner of Ambient Communities.

Built in 1971, the 110-room Consulate Hotel at 2901 Nimitz Blvd. is about two blocks from the waterfront and couldn’t compete, Horner said.

Ambient communities bought the hotel in February and renamed it Celeste.

Since it closed, the hotel had been used as a training ground for police to practice breaking down doors and a crash pad for vagrants, according to Horner.

Continue Reading Former 1970’s Hotel in Point Loma, Now Being Refurbished, Will Offer Studios and One-Bedroom Apartments