Where We Build, and How We Build, Matters
The 30-foot height limit is one of San Diego’s most successful examples of community-driven planning
By Mandy Havlik
San Diegans know that our city’s coastline isn’t just a postcard view, it’s our identity, our economy, and our shared responsibility to future generations. The recent Court of Appeal ruling striking down the City’s attempt to bypass the voter-approved 30-foot coastal height limit wasn’t a setback, it was a reaffirmation that the people’s voice and environmental law still matter in San Diego.
When voters passed the Proposition D height limit in 1972, they weren’t trapped in the past, they were protecting the coastline from the same forces of overdevelopment that have erased the character of so many other coastal cities. They knew that the ocean belongs to everyone, not just to developers or investors who see dollar signs instead of waves and wetlands.
The 30-foot height limit is one of San Diego’s most successful examples of community-driven planning. It preserves our coastal beauty, sustains property values, protects public access to beaches, and prevents the shadowing of our natural open spaces. That’s not arbitrary geography, that’s thoughtful stewardship.

By City News Service –
The proposal comes as the city’s cannabis tax revenue continues to slump.
By Donna Frye
Let’s Help Her Through This Tough Time — Visit the
by Will Huntsberry /
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By Paul Krueger
One Planner Says — ‘OB Is Already a Complete Community’ in Discussion on Historic District
On Halloween day, the City of San Diego announced that the Development Services Department was proposing to permanently remove 8 concrete fire rings from South Mission Beach — six seasonal and two year-round — and relocate two of them to the East and West side of Bonita Cove, a nearby section of Mission Bay Park. The remaining six will be placed around Fiesta Island.
Local property owners were notified of this step. The city announced that “a consolidated Coastal Development Permit application is to be filed with the California Coastal Commission. This Site Development Permit application was filed on October 25, 2025.”




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