Councilmember Sean Elo-Rivera: Stop Playing Policy Roulette With People’s Lives
By Francine Maxwell
Here we go again.
Councilmember Sean Elo-Rivera has found another headline to chase — this time with a proposed ballot measure targeting homeowners who’ve managed to hang onto a second property in the very neighborhoods they grew up in.
He’s calling it “housing reform.” Let’s call it what it is: a grab for generational wealth.
Because here’s the truth — the families he’s coming for aren’t developers sitting on luxury condos in La Jolla. They’re working-class San Diegans — teachers, retirees, veterans — who bought a modest home decades ago, stayed connected to their roots, and are holding onto it as a legacy for their kids.
But now, because they can’t afford to live in it full-time, he’s labeling them part of the “housing problem.”
Make it make sense.
Instead of addressing the real drivers of our housing crisis — corporate speculation, short-term rentals, and the City’s failure to build truly affordable units — he’s coming for locals. The same locals who built the communities this city is now trying to rebrand.

From
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By Phillip Molnar /
Here is an update from the folks who organized the campaign, “
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Editordude: In the U-T today, Thursday, Oct. 23, they ran a
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By
Opponents to dense housing developments in Los Angeles turned their attention to transit after Gov. Newsom signed SB79 — a law encouraging high-rise construction near bus and rail lines.
The following was published as a Letter to the Editor in the San Diego Union-Tribune on October 22, 2025
by Ernie McCray




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