San Diego Loses 30-Foot Height Limit Fight, Again; Future of ‘Midway Rising’ Up in the Air — At Least Temporarily
Editordude: Here’s two not-too-far-apart views of Friday, Oct. 17’s Appeals Court ruling that overturned a lower court decision regarding Midway District 30-foot height limits. The first is from Times of San Diego and the second is from Voice of San Diego. This new ruling by a three-judge panel of the 4th District Court of Appeal concluded the City of San Diego did not comply with state requirements “to adequately inform the public of the potential environmental impacts of approving the second ballot measure to remove the height limit in the Midway-Pacific Highway area.” The panel then ordered the city to comply with the California Environmental Quality Act.
This does put the future of the redevelopment project of the Sports Arena area, Midway Rising, in doubt. Residents around the city are already popping champagne bottles in celebration. People who fought against that second ballot measure are breathing a sigh of relief. Yet Midway Rising developers claim they’re not worried and that they can still build their project. And just last month the $3.9 billion project Midway Rising got a thumbs up from the Planning Commission. Plus the knowledge that money talks in this town and that this decision itself can be appealed, should be a pause in those celebrations.
by Jennifer Vigil / Times of San Diego / Oct. 17, 2025
… The three-judge panel of the 4th District Court of Appeal considered whether the city complied with state requirements “to adequately inform the public of the potential environmental impacts of approving the second ballot measure to remove the height limit in the Midway-Pacific Highway area.”
“We conclude it did not,” the panel said in its ruling and ordered the city to comply with the California Environmental Quality Act.
Also in play were whether the city had identified mitigation measures or disclosed “the reasons for approving removal of the height limit even if there are significant environmental impacts.”
The saga dates back to 2020, when voters passed Measure E to remove the 30-foot height limit in the Midway. The district had been included in a zone of coastal communities that has been protected since 1972, but the height limits also barred replacing what is now known as Pechanga Arena and redevelopment of the aging streets around it.

By Unknown North County Poet / 





While watching a trio of thirty-something progressive podcast pundits discussing protests of the upcoming “No Kings Day”, they mentioned how they really appreciated the boomers, those gray-haired people with chapsticks and NPB tote bags who continue to dominate in numbers all the anti-Trump protests over these last 9 months.
Stop Sign on Evergreen, Run-Off Ponds at Slough, and 30-Foot Breach on Ingelow Street
By Ron Donoho /
By Kate Callen
By Scott Nover /
The Trumpian Republican campaign to smear the “No Kings Day” protest is utterly failing, as more and more October 18 events are popping up across the country. There’s now over 2500 events planned — with 17 in San Diego County alone.
By Steffi Roche / 




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