San Diego to Appeal to California’s Supreme Court in Fight Against Ruling on Midway District Height Limit

 Source  November 18, 2025  4 Comments on San Diego to Appeal to California’s Supreme Court in Fight Against Ruling on Midway District Height Limit

Is This a Quixotic Move by City in Efforts to Eliminate the 30-foot Height Limit? State Appellate Court Ruled that 2022 Ballot Measure Was Illegally Placed Before Voters

By Jennifer Van Grove / The San Diego Union-Tribune / November 18, 2025 

San Diego will ask the state’s highest court to keep intact a 2022 ballot measure, recently deemed illegal, that sought to eliminate the 30-foot height limit from the Midway District.

Monday, San Diego City Council members voted 6 to 2 in closed session to authorize a petition for review to the Supreme Court of California.

The decision comes one month after the city lost, on appeal, a lawsuit to environmental advocacy group Save Our Access, which contested the legality of the ballot measure, known as Measure C.

In October, California’s 4th District Court of Appeal determined that the city violated California’s Environmental Quality Act, or CEQA, when it put the ballot measure in front of voters before sufficiently studying the environmental impacts of taller buildings. The three-judge panel decision, in favor of plaintiff Save Our Access, directed the trial court to issue a writ of mandate, which would invalidate the ordinance and restore the 30-foot height limit in the Midway District.

The ruling could have devastating implications for new development in a part of town city leaders have said has been hamstrung by the 53-year-old building height restriction.

Continue Reading San Diego to Appeal to California’s Supreme Court in Fight Against Ruling on Midway District Height Limit

Explosive Device Detonated in Ocean Beach Alley

 Staff  November 18, 2025  2 Comments on Explosive Device Detonated in Ocean Beach Alley

Around midnight and 1 a.m. Nov. 16, an explosive device was detonated in the alley between Cape May and Brighton east of Abbott .

No one was hurt but a truck sustained damage. The San Diego City Metro Bomb Squad was on scene gathering evidence and conducting an investigation.

Come inside and see the video by Charles Landon who interviews some witnesses to the sound of the explosion and the fireball.

Continue Reading Explosive Device Detonated in Ocean Beach Alley

San Diego City Council President LaCava Slams the Door On Citizen Participation

 Source  November 17, 2025  9 Comments on San Diego City Council President LaCava Slams the Door On Citizen Participation

By Paul Krueger

California has robust protections for citizen participation in the government process, with laws that require open meetings and encourage full public participation at the local level.

But City Council President Joe LaCava violated the spirit — if not the letter — of those protections today (Monday, Nov. 17) when he made it extremely — and unnecessarily difficult for San Diegans to keep informed about important actions related to a controversial building height limit in the Midway/Pacific Highway area.

The City Council met today in Closed Session to discuss — and probably vote on — Mayor Todd Gloria and City Attorney Heather Ferbert’s effort to overturn the recent appellate court ruling that reinstates the 30-foot height limit throughout the 1,300-acre Midway/ Pacific Highway district.

That unanimous appellate court ruling requires the city to perform a more comprehensive environmental study of the negative impacts of high-density, high-rise development in the Midway/Pac Hwy area. Armed with this additional information, voters would — for the third time — decide the size and shape of future development in that neighborhood.

Continue Reading San Diego City Council President LaCava Slams the Door On Citizen Participation

The Radio Towers in Emerald Hills — Another Chapter in the Stacking of the Deck

 Source  November 17, 2025  2 Comments on The Radio Towers in Emerald Hills — Another Chapter in the Stacking of the Deck

Thursday, November 20th, at 9am, the San Diego Planning Commission will hold hearing on the “Radio Towers” of Emerald Hills

By Rob Campbell 

This Thursday, November 20th, at 9am, at 7650 Mission Valley Road, San Diego, the San Diego Planning Commission will hear agenda item #2. This agenda item concerns what some call the “Radio Towers” of Emerald Hills.

In the historically Black enclave of the neighborhood of Emerald Hills in San Diego, the latest development upheaval lays bare how old injustices don’t die. They merely get repackaged in the language of progress.  What was once a promise of expanding parkland for a neighborhood long denied environmental justice or infrastructure, the last and largest green space is now being transmuted into a windfall for a for-profit multibillion-dollar corporation, with the full complicity of the City of San Diego and its planning apparatus.

The project in question — what locals call the “Radio Towers” — is a parcel on Old Memory Lane, formerly earmarked for new parkland in Emerald Hills, a “destination” park offering sweeping downtown and ocean views.  It is now slated instead to host 130 private homes with a single entrance and exit with an up-zoning at roughly 400% the density allowed in the same zoning white-neighborhood just to the north in La Jolla.

Here’s the brutal arithmetic of injustice:

Continue Reading The Radio Towers in Emerald Hills — Another Chapter in the Stacking of the Deck

Rag Writers – J.W. August and Paul Krueger — Honored for Journalism, Community Activism

 Frank Gormlie  November 17, 2025  3 Comments on Rag Writers – J.W. August and Paul Krueger — Honored for Journalism, Community Activism

By Frank Gormlie

I’m happy to share the news that two of the Rag’s current commentators and long-time San Diego journalist have received well-deserved awards of merit from local non-profit organizations.

J.W. August was honored by the San Diego Press Club with a “Best in Show” award for “Best Daily and Online Entry Excellence in Journalism.” August was recognized for his KPBS report on a detective in the Navy Criminal Investigations Division who is now serving time for abusing a federal prisoner in custody.


Paul Krueger was honored by the San Diego County Taxpayers Association with the Chairman’s Golden Watchdog Award for Grassroots Advocacy. Paul is a co-founder of both Neighbors for a Better San Diego and the San Diego Community Coalition.

Continue Reading Rag Writers – J.W. August and Paul Krueger — Honored for Journalism, Community Activism

Ocean Beach Army Veteran Dies After Collapsing at Coronado Half Marathon

 Source  November 17, 2025  1 Comment on Ocean Beach Army Veteran Dies After Collapsing at Coronado Half Marathon

by Caleb Lunetta / San Diego Union-Tribune / Nov. 15, 2025

Scottie Williams, a U.S. Army veteran and Ocean Beach resident, lived with intention, his family said Friday. When the 28-year-old said he’d do something — like finishing a job or committing to hanging out with someone — he’d do it.

On Sunday, Nov. 9 he approached the Silver Strand Half Marathon with that same level of commitment, strongly finishing the race in the same fashion he had completed so many other half marathons before. But after crossing the finish line and receiving his medal, the seemingly healthy Williams collapsed and died.

“It was a normal day,” said Sarah Lloyd, his older sister. “And then he just collapsed. They worked on him for a long time, and they just couldn’t bring him back.”

“We don’t have any answers,” she added.

Continue Reading Ocean Beach Army Veteran Dies After Collapsing at Coronado Half Marathon

Venezuela Is Not Just Some ‘Small Latin American Country’

 Source  November 17, 2025  1 Comment on Venezuela Is Not Just Some ‘Small Latin American Country’

Any talk of a quick invasion and easy ‘regime change’ is dangerously misleading.

By Mark Hertling / The Bulwark – Reader Supported News / Nov 13, 2025

OVER THE PAST FEW MONTHS, the United States has embarked on a controversial maritime campaign in the Caribbean Sea and Eastern Pacific targeting small Venezuelan and Colombian vessels alleged to be engaged in drug smuggling. Under an asserted “narcoterrorist” deterrence operation, the United States has thus far carried out nineteen twenty lethal strikes on small boats in international waters, killing at least seventy-six people, all undertaken without the transparency, oversight, or legal foundation that normally governs the use of American force.

The Trump administration insists these are long-needed and decisive counternarcotics operations. But U.N. human-rights experts warn that the strikes may “amount[] to extrajudicial executions,” and allies with territory and citizens in the Caribbean are raising alarms about legal exposure, civilian risk, and regional instability. With the USS Gerald R. Ford carrier strike group near to arriving on station and President Trump threatening “hundreds more” strikes, the mission looks less like enhanced interdiction and far more like the early shaping operations for regime-change in Venezuela.

Continue Reading Venezuela Is Not Just Some ‘Small Latin American Country’

Another Pedestrian Killed by Car in the Midway District

 Staff  November 17, 2025  3 Comments on Another Pedestrian Killed by Car in the Midway District

An unidentified male pedestrian was killed late Friday night, Nov. 14, when he ran across a street in the Midway District and was struck by a SUV.

Police responded at 11:11 p.m. to Hancock Street and Camino del Rio West, where they determined the 33-year old had run east across the intersection against the red “Don’t walk” signal. Then he was struck a BMW being driven by a 55-year-old woman driving north on Camino del Rio West. The woman driver had a green traffic light.

Continue Reading Another Pedestrian Killed by Car in the Midway District

San Diego Community Coalition Expands Programs, Services with First Edition of ‘This Week at City Hall’

 Source  November 17, 2025  4 Comments on San Diego Community Coalition Expands Programs, Services with First Edition of ‘This Week at City Hall’

The San Diego Community Coalition, now in its seventh month, is hitting full stride with a series of “Town Halls with Newsmakers,” a campaign of outreach to underserved communities, and an email bulletin keeping members informed of upcoming City Hall meetings.

David Garrick, the San Diego Union-Tribune’s City Hall Reporter, will be our guest speaker at the Coalition’s second Town Hall forum on Saturday, December 13, from 12 noon to 1:00 p.m. at the Logan Heights Library, 567 S. 28 Street. Neighbors for a Better San Diego will co-host the forum, which is titled “This Just In: Covering the City Hall Beat.”

The series began October 25 when District 7 City Councilmember Raul Campillo met with community leaders from across the City. As reported in the Rag, “The unwritten rule at City Hall forums is that elected officials speak at length and on script while their constituents listen … A relaxed Campillo broke that rule and clearly enjoyed the spirited give-and-take.”

As part of its commitment to empowering all San Diego communities to fight predatory development, the Coalition will make informational presentations before south-of-Interstate-8 community planning groups beginning next month.

Continue Reading San Diego Community Coalition Expands Programs, Services with First Edition of ‘This Week at City Hall’

Donna Frye: Help Stop Paid Parking at Our Beaches and Mission Bay Park — Please Contact City Council Before Tuesday, Nov.18

 Source  November 15, 2025  15 Comments on Donna Frye: Help Stop Paid Parking at Our Beaches and Mission Bay Park — Please Contact City Council Before Tuesday, Nov.18

Thoughts on other revenue sources

By Donna Frye

The City of San Diego has a problem with its budget and is looking for ways to find money to balance it. On Tuesday, November 18 at 2 pm, the city council will be voting on their budget priorities and also considering revenue options.

It is Item-331 on the agenda.

Council President La Cava and Councilmember Elo-Rivera, have proposed charging non-resident entry fees to park at our beaches and bays, such as Mission Bay Park, to help balance the budget.

This is a really bad idea for lots of reasons including:

  1. The public doesn’t support paid parking because it limits access to our beaches and bays.
Continue Reading Donna Frye: Help Stop Paid Parking at Our Beaches and Mission Bay Park — Please Contact City Council Before Tuesday, Nov.18

Trump’s DOJ Wants to Block Prop 50 Vote — Sues California

 Source  November 14, 2025  2 Comments on Trump’s DOJ Wants to Block Prop 50 Vote — Sues California

By PBS / Nov. 13, 2025

The Justice Department on Thursday sued to block new congressional district boundaries approved by California voters last week, joining a court battle that could help determine which party wins control of the U.S. House in 2026.

The complaint filed in California federal court targets the new congressional map pushed by Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom in response to a similar Republican-led effort in Texas backed by President Donald Trump. It sets the stage for a high-stakes legal and political fight between the Republican administration and the Democratic governor, who’s seen as a likely 2028 presidential contender.

“California’s redistricting scheme is a brazen power grab that tramples on civil rights and mocks the democratic process,” Attorney General Pam Bondi said in an emailed statement. “Governor Newsom’s attempt to entrench one-party rule and silence millions of Californians will not stand.”

California voters overwhelmingly approved Proposition 50, a constitutional amendment changing the congressional boundaries to give Democrats a shot at winning five seats now held by Republicans in next year’s midterm elections.

Continue Reading Trump’s DOJ Wants to Block Prop 50 Vote — Sues California

New City Staff Recommendation on Paid Parking in Balboa Park — $150 Per Year For Residents — Still Too High and Makes Our ‘Gem’ a Park for the Rich

 Frank Gormlie  November 14, 2025  13 Comments on New City Staff Recommendation on Paid Parking in Balboa Park — $150 Per Year For Residents — Still Too High and Makes Our ‘Gem’ a Park for the Rich

Last week, staff from the city of San Diego’s Parks & Rec department released a framework for long-term parking in Balboa Park, one that proposed charging residents $300 per year to park in the city’s crown jewel. Visitors, whether from Del Mar or Delaware, would have had to pay $375 annually.

On Thursday, though, after pushback from the community, adjusted figures from staffers were announced, with a significantly reduced rate: $150 a month, a number in line with one first proposed by some Balboa Park stakeholders when the city council was considering the plan back in September.

Out-of-towners, however, would now be the ones shelling out $300 a year for unlimited visits to Balboa Park under the new plan. A three-month pass for city residents would drop to $60 from the originally proposed $80, while monthly passes would remain at $30, $40 for visitors. A quarterly pass for visitors would actually swell to $120, up from the first proposal of $100.

Continue Reading New City Staff Recommendation on Paid Parking in Balboa Park — $150 Per Year For Residents — Still Too High and Makes Our ‘Gem’ a Park for the Rich