After Raising Fees, Mayor Gloria Orders Belt Tightening. Wait, What? Shouldn’t That Have Already Happened?
By San Diego Monitor News / December 5, 2025
San Diego officials are tightening the city’s belt once again, confronting a financial hole that continues to widen despite a wave of new fees and rate increases approved earlier this year. Mayor Todd Gloria has instructed every department to clamp down on spending immediately, warning that the coming budget cycle will demand even tougher decisions.
City leaders have been reviewing virtually every line of spending, from overtime to contracts that provide everything from homeless services to rented construction equipment. The mayor’s financial team issued the directive after discovering that equipment rentals alone cost the city more than six million dollars last year — often without full council review. Now, department managers must justify each contract and revisit their cost projections ahead of next year’s budget process.
Even with new revenue from trash pickup fees, parking charges in Balboa Park, and other rate adjustments, the city still faces a projected deficit nearing ninety million dollars for the fiscal year that starts next July. That number could swell past one hundred million if the city loses expected one-time homelessness funding or must expand staffing to meet operational needs. Roughly half of the gap represents long-term, structural problems that will require permanent fixes.

by Michael Casey /
Tuesday’s actions bring to at least 14 the number of states the Justice Department has sued in its quest for the voter information [including California].
San Diego County Supervisor Terra Lawson-Remer held a community meeting in Encinitas Thursday, Dec. 4, to urge the public to take a stand against the Trump administration’s plans to expand Califonia’s offshore drilling. She was joined by Solana Beach Mayor Lesa Heebner. The meeting had been organized by the environmental groups California Coastal Protection Network, Oceana, Surfrider Foundation and Wildcoast.
Lawson-Remer said she and others are united in defending the San Diego region, and told President Donald Trump and oil executives to “go pound sand.”
Once again, we return to Letters to the Editor for the truth — and it’s so much more fun to see letters written by people you know. So, here’s a couple from today’s Union-Tribune, one from Rag writer Kate Callen and another from Ralph Teyssier, a commenter on the Rag.
by Michael J. Stepner and Mary Lydon /
By Jillian Butler
Wit
h Ocean Beach’s historical opposition to large corporate franchises and diverse array of small businesses, this was met with stark opposition from the community back in 2017. A petition against the Target garnered over 2,600 signatures. Local print shop, James Gang, sold “
There’s been a spike in detentions of Afghans living in San Diego recently and it’s being condemned by the local chapter of America’s largest Muslim civil rights group, CAIR, which stands for Council on American-Islamic Relations.
A brand new Smart & Final Store will be opening in the Midway District on December 10. And it appears it will be opening in the former Big Lots! on Rosecrans.
OB’s Azucar just made “10 Best San Diego Bakeries” in the national website
By David Garrick / 




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