Defend Democracy, Vote for Prop 50

 Source  October 3, 2025  5 Comments on Defend Democracy, Vote for Prop 50

by Trena Turner / Cal-Matters / Sept. 19, 2025

As a California redistricting commissioner, I have witnessed firsthand the careful, deliberate and transparent process that drew our congressional lines to reflect the real people of our state. The work was not easy, but it was honorable — and it safeguarded the principle that every community deserves fair representation.

Which is why I am both alarmed and deeply disappointed at the way conversations around Proposition 50, California’s mid-cycle redistricting measure, have often been reduced to a single, shallow question: “What will it cost?”

Yes, this special election carries a financial cost. But if we view it only through dollars and cents, we ignore the greater risks. An estimated 3.4 million Californians stand to lose health care coverage due to Medicaid cuts, and another 3.1 million people — children, veterans and families — face the loss of vital nutrition assistance through SNAP.

There are measurable consequences of this moment that will reshape the health and stability of our state, while steadily eroding the foundations of our democracy.

We cannot ignore the reality that this year’s map-redrawing in Texas and other states, at President Trump’s urging, has been widely challenged as racial gerrymandering. This continues a generational pattern in many states where lines are drawn to weaken Black, brown, immigrant and working-class voices so politicians can pick their voters.

Continue Reading Defend Democracy, Vote for Prop 50

Will Ocean Beach Ever Get Another Pier?

 Source  October 2, 2025  9 Comments on Will Ocean Beach Ever Get Another Pier?

by Dave Schwab / Times of San Diego / Oct. 2, 2025

Ocean Beach residents are beginning to wonder when – or even if – their community’s landmark pier will ever be replaced.

The old pier was closed to the public since October 2023 because of its deteriorating condition.

“Us old-timers would like to see the pier rebuilt in our lifetime,” said Mark Winkie, a former member of the now-disbanded Ocean Beach Pier Task Force. “That would be a good goal.”

Noting he “used the pier almost every day,” when he first moved to OB in the ‘80s, Winkie added that the pier is special to OB residents.

“It gives people who can’t get out on the ocean an experience of connecting to the water and the natural environment: It’s a public resource,” he said, “It’s one of the crown jewels of the city and county.

“We want to see it rebuilt and put back to its former glory.”

Another former OB Pier Task Force member, Ralph Teyssier, who is a structural engineer and the son of Leonard Teyssier – who built the OB Pier – said he is as concerned with finding funding to replace the pier as he is with the timeline for the project, which he noted continues to be extended.

Continue Reading Will Ocean Beach Ever Get Another Pier?

Will the Charlie Kirk Assassination Inspire a Young Generation to Solve Our Problems with Guns?

 Ernie McCray  October 2, 2025  4 Comments on Will the Charlie Kirk Assassination Inspire a Young Generation to Solve Our Problems with Guns?

by Ernie McCray

Oh I wonder if we will ever solve this gun problem
that hangs over our nation
like a vicious thundercloud,
the latest tragedy
involving Charlie Kirk’s life being taken,
an assassination
that apparently has triggered,
no pun intended,
a few celebrations
which kind of chills me to the bone.

Continue Reading Will the Charlie Kirk Assassination Inspire a Young Generation to Solve Our Problems with Guns?

From City Planning to Magical Thinking in the College Area: ‘Oh, How Far We Have Fallen’

 Source  October 2, 2025  8 Comments on From City Planning to Magical Thinking in the College Area: ‘Oh, How Far We Have Fallen’

A Plea for Residents of Other Neighborhoods to Stand With the College Area at the Upcoming Planning Commission Hearing — Oct. 9

By Robert Montana

With San Diego’s proposed update to the College Area Community Plan, we are witnessing the complete negation of professional urban planning in the City of San
Diego. And this proposal on our eastern edge matters mightily to all citizens throughout the city because if appointed and elected officials don’t come to their senses, this
updated plan will become the blueprint for all future ‘planning’ efforts from city staff.

The College Area Community Planning Board (CACPB) needs the assistance of everyone who believes that good urban planning matters to us today and to those who
will come to our region in the future with hopes of a brighter destiny for themselves and their children. Specifically, the San Diego Planning Commission will hear the proposed plan update on October 9, 2025, in their new location at 7650 Mission Valley Road in Mission Valley. And the CACPB needs people from all the communities within San Diego to stand, speak and declare that growth is important, but that it must be accompanied by improvements in basic infrastructure that meet expected demand in a timely manner. The glaring problem with the proposal is the lack of any nexus between development and infrastructure.

Let’s dive into some specifics.

Continue Reading From City Planning to Magical Thinking in the College Area: ‘Oh, How Far We Have Fallen’

Ocean Beach Woman’s Club Holds Fifth Annual Charity Ping Pong Tournament

 Source  October 2, 2025  0 Comments on Ocean Beach Woman’s Club Holds Fifth Annual Charity Ping Pong Tournament

By Jillian Butler 

The Ocean Beach Woman’s Club (OBWC), a century-old San Diego institution, drew crowds of players and spectators to its Fifth Annual ‘Battle for the Paddle’ charity ping pong tournament, raising more than $5,000 for local causes.

With the current clubhouse being established in 1944, the OBWC is in its 101st year of operation despite clubhouses surviving a multitude of natural disasters from fires to being crushed by waves during a high surf advisory. This organization has spearheaded a multitude of charitable ventures, ranging from providing a center of refuge for servicemembers during the second world war to advocating for year round life guards to raising money for homeless pets. The Battle for the Paddle ping pong tournament is one of their larger annual fundraisers.

The Tournament was spearheaded by the OBWC Project Lead, Susan Winkie, and Christine Freeman, the Project Lead of OBWC’s Philanthropy and Social Justice branch. Ms. Winkie commanded a strong presence as she emcee’d the entirety of the event.

Continue Reading Ocean Beach Woman’s Club Holds Fifth Annual Charity Ping Pong Tournament

October 2025 Events for San Diego from the Ocean Beach Green Center

 Source  October 1, 2025  0 Comments on October 2025 Events for San Diego from the Ocean Beach Green Center

Every Saturday at 10:30 am. San Diego Climate Mobilization Coalition Meetings October 4th, 11th, 18th, and 25th.

Every Saturday 10 am – 12 pm Peace Vigil for Palestine

Every Thursday  10 am ICE out of San Diego Event by San Diego & Imperial Counties Labor Council

The San Diego River Park Foundation has volunteer opportunities in Ocean Beach:

October 1st Wednesday to October 8th Wednesday  Climate Week

October 1st Wednesday 4 pm – 5pm Resist Trump Flash Banner Action

October 1st Wednesday 6 pm AAPI Immigration Panel Event by The Asian American Pacific Islander

October 2nd. Thursday 6 pm – 8 pm Local Climate Action at a Crossroads:  Accountability, Activism, and People Power

October 3rd Friday 2 pm – 4:30 pm Rally and Press Conference Event by San Diego Veterans For Peace

October 3rd. Friday  2:30 pm – 5:30 pm  Exploring Ecosystems and Water Pollution at the Tijuana River Estuary

October 4th Saturday 9:30 am – 4 pm Walter Munk Day

October 5th Sunday 2 pm Rise up for Gaza International Day of Action

October 6th Monday 6 pm- 8:30 pm EARTH’S GREATEST ENEMY

Continue Reading October 2025 Events for San Diego from the Ocean Beach Green Center

Mission Hills Faces a 12-Story Disaster — and City Hall Is Letting It Happen

 Source  October 1, 2025  7 Comments on Mission Hills Faces a 12-Story Disaster — and City Hall Is Letting It Happen

By Doug Poole

The proposed 12-story project at 820 Fort Stockton Drive is nothing short of a looming disaster for Mission Hills. This isn’t smart growth or thoughtful planning — it’s a reckless gamble that will scar our neighborhood for decades.

The design is physically ugly, completely out of scale, and wildly out of character with the historic charm of Mission Hills. Let’s be honest: it will look like a 12-story prison dropped into the  middle of our community. No thoughtful design. No respect for the neighborhood. No consideration for the people who live here.

Developers are exploiting loopholes in the City’s Complete Communities program, fast-tracking this project while silencing community voices. City officials want you to believe their hands are tied — that “ministerial approval” leaves them powerless. That’s simply not true.

Even within Complete Communities, Councilmember Stephen Whitburn has the ability to demand a higher level of review and public accountability. But so far, he has refused to stand up to the developer. Instead, he hides behind process and lets a flawed project sail through without the scrutiny it desperately needs.

Continue Reading Mission Hills Faces a 12-Story Disaster — and City Hall Is Letting It Happen

The Commander in Chief Is Not Okay

 Source  October 1, 2025  4 Comments on The Commander in Chief Is Not Okay

By Tom Nichols / The Atlantic- Reader Supported News / October 1, 2025

Trump put on a disturbing show for America’s generals and admirals.

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth’s convocation of hundreds of generals and admirals today turned out to be, in the main, a nothingburger. Hegseth strutted and paced and lectured and hectored, warning the officers that he was tired of seeing fat people in the halls of the Pentagon and promising to take the men who have medical or religious exemptions from shaving—read: mostly Black men—and kick them out of the military. He assured them that the “woke” Department of Defense was now a robust and manly Department of War, and that they would no longer have to worry about people “smearing” them as “toxic” leaders. (Hegseth went on a tirade about the word toxic itself, noting that if a commitment to high standards made him “toxic,” then “so be it.”)

All in all, an utterly embarrassing address. But that wasn’t the worst of it. The assembled military leaders likely already knew that Hegseth is unqualified for his job, and they could mostly tune out the sloganeering that Hegseth, a former TV host, was probably aiming more at Fox News and the White House than at the military itself. What they could not ignore, however, was the spectacle that President Donald Trump put on when he spoke after Hegseth.

The president talked at length, and his comments should have confirmed to even the most sympathetic observer that he is, as the kids say, not okay.

Continue Reading The Commander in Chief Is Not Okay

Wake Up! Trump Is Moving Swiftly to Become the First American Dictator

 Source  October 1, 2025  8 Comments on Wake Up! Trump Is Moving Swiftly to Become the First American Dictator

By Thom Hartmann / Common Dreams / October 1, 2025

Will American democracy survive this onslaught, straight out of the Dictator’s Playbook? To a large extent, that will depend on you, me, and our elected officials summoning the courage to resist and protest loudly. And our media to call it out for what it is.

Most jobs have a “playbook,” a sort of instruction manual or checklist for how to do the job right, whether it’s running an assembly line, piloting an aircraft, or redoing a house’s plumbing.

Although our media seems oblivious to it, dictators have a playbook, too.

It’s one that’s been carefully followed in recent times by Putin, Orbán, Erdo?on, Duterte, Bolsonaro, and numerous initially-elected leaders of other smaller nations. In previous generations the Dictator’s Playbook was followed, step-by-step, by Mussolini, Hitler, Franco, Marcos, Pinochet, Stalin, and Tojo (among others).

And now it’s being followed by Donald Trump and JD Vance, who’re a bit more than halfway through the list. Trump’s speech yesterday before our assembled military generals and admirals — telling them they should use our American cities as “training grounds” for the military whose job is to “kill people and break things” — is getting us closer to the final steps.

“We are under invasion from within,” Trump said, “no different than a foreign enemy, but more difficult in many ways, because they don’t wear uniforms. … We’re under invasion from within.”

Continue Reading Wake Up! Trump Is Moving Swiftly to Become the First American Dictator

City of San Diego’s Unrealistic Plan for College Area Ignores Community Input

 Source  October 1, 2025  0 Comments on City of San Diego’s Unrealistic Plan for College Area Ignores Community Input

by Robert Montana and Rene Kaprielian / Times of San Diego /  Sept. 26, 2025

In 2019, in anticipation of the city’s upcoming College Area Community Plan update, the College Area Community Planning Board started to develop its own community-driven, 30-year growth strategy. The planning board believed that if it could show where to place new housing density that hit similar growth targets approved for other San Diego communities, the city would give strong consideration to its plan.

[Please see original here for important links to documents.]

After a year of meetings and working groups, the board’s finished plan called for creation of an urban village around San Diego State University adjacent to the campus trolley station. It envisioned high-density housing along College Avenue, Montezuma Road and other major thoroughfares with access to the existing bus system.

The plan anticipated adding approximately 11,300 dwelling units to the current 8,100 units — 137% more — and increasing the area’s population by 112% from 19,700 to 42,200. These increases are in line with recently approved community plan updates for Mira Mesa, Hillcrest and Clairemont.

In 2020, the City Planning Department started its formal multi-year College Area Community Plan Update. After an open house and initial comment period, the department put forth four plan alternatives, completely ignoring College Area Community Planning Board’s earlier effort.

The city’s current version of the community plan update calls for increasing the College Area’s population by nearly 300% from 19,700 to over 74,000 people, with no major infrastructure improvements.

Continue Reading City of San Diego’s Unrealistic Plan for College Area Ignores Community Input