Gloria: ‘Failure Not an Option’ — Vows to Appeal Adverse Court Ruling and to Press on with Midway Rising
By City News Press – Times of San Diego / October 20, 2025
Despite a Court of Appeals ruling once again denying the city of San Diego the ability to lift a 30-foot height limit in the Midway District, Mayor Todd Gloria said Monday the fight wasn’t over.
In a ruling issued Friday, the 4th District Court of Appeal determined the city hadn’t done its due diligence in completing an environmental study on the plan to raise the height limit in the neighborhood — part of an effort to greenlight the nearly $4 billion Midway Rising project.
This is the second time a court has overturned a voter-approved ballot measure to lift the coastal 30-foot limit for new construction in the area on a procedural technicality. San Diego’s voters approved “Measure E” to raise the limit in 2020 by a 13-point margin, 56.6% to 43.4%. [Editordude: In an even closer vote, the second effort to raise the limit, Measure C in 2022 barely passed with only 51%; it was opposed by a group called “Keep the Coast 30” which virtually had no money.]

By Lawrynce Cecio
While attending the festival, one thing was clear: Mission Bayfest and its organizers did an exceptional job at combining national acts who got their start here in SoCal with emerging home-grown talent that encapsulates the spirit of the space they all inhabit.
Save Our Access Urges San Diegans to Fight for Sustainable Development with Parks along San Diego River
Community Dialogue
By Sheila Pell / 
The 52-acre resort is situated on city-owned land and lies within the coastal zone, so the work has to be approved by both the commission and the city.
City used $3.5 million from development fund on an emergency storm drain repair — Councilmember Raul Campillo said “it should be done transparently, with clear communication to the community – not buried deep in a budget appendix”
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.
By Unknown North County Poet / 










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