Call to Action: We Need Transparency, Not Secrecy, in Selecting New San Diego Police Chief
In the next few months we will have a new San Diego Chief of Police and I hope that whoever gets the job can do something, for me, no one has been able to do: create an environment wherein I don’t find myself squirming a bit every time a police officer rolls up behind me or next to me. I just can’t help it, though, with my life’s experiences.
Now, hey, don’t get me wrong, I’ve known some good police officers — parents at my schools, guys I grew up with, dudes I’ve toked and toasted with, played ball with — it’s just that the bad seeds among them can be downright scary at times.
OB Town Council: Holiday Volunteering and Learning to Be a Special Advocate for Kids – Wed., Oct. 25th
At their final public meeting for 2017, the Ocean Beach Town Council will host a forum to learn about volunteer opportunities with their upcoming holiday events, which are extensive; there’s the Food and Toy Drive, the Christmas Tree, the Annual Christmas Auction – and of course, the world famous OB Holiday Parade in early December. The Parade itself needs dozens of volunteers.
It’s also getting time for the OBTC yearly elections to the Board of Directors – so the Council will share their elections timeline for OBTC members to get elected to the Board .
The meeting will conclude with learning about opportunities to volunteer as a Court Appointed Special Advocate (CASA) for children in our region.
OB Halloween Walkabout
Being an occasional column featuring sights and sounds from Ocean Beach and Point Loma, this edition celebrates Halloween in OB.
An OB Halloween memory:
It was late October, some year in the 1970s and my girlfriend Mary Pat and I were hanging out in OB, bored.
We had no Halloween party to go to, no costumes, no ideas. Finally, I suggested we grab some pink bedsheets from the closet
A Summary of Nuclear Waste Issue at San Onofre
I was recently asked to clear up some confusion about our nuclear waste strategy in an email thread between some good friends. I thought it might be worth sharing a refined version of my reply with you.
Also if you have not signed and shared our Petition yet, please do.
Here is the basic objective:
Delay the date for silos on the beach to get loaded with extremely radioactive waste.
This allows time to consider better alternatives that make us safer while deadly waste remains here cooling off for perhaps decades before it can be moved. We must deal with the fact that they are using canisters that can’t be monitored to prevent leaks, can’t be repaired
Restaurant Review: Meechai Thai Cuisine in the Midway
Restaurant Review
Meechai Thai Cuisine
3960 W. Point Loma Blvd. #4
(Midway Town Center at Sports Arena)
San Diego, CA 92110
619-224-4871
On the one day of the week that the weather changed from 80 degrees to 68 degrees, windy, and wet, was the one day that the Widows were getting together for lunch. So it was left up to me to find a place and I remembered going to the Meechai 25 years ago. I wondered how much it had changed over the years.
I was pleasantly surprised to find that not much has changed.
The ambiance was inviting; the seating was cozy; and Janet, the server, was the same server from many years ago. What probably has changed was the menu.
Point Loma’s Jack Allen Davis – Pilot and Adventurer of a Bygone Era
San Diego historian Karen Scanton presented “Read the Book Before you Fly ‘Em,” a lecture focused on Point Loma’s Jack Allen Davis, Jr. at last Thursday’s – October 19th – OB Historical Society’s monthly event.
In a series of slides Scanton offered a biographic lecture focused on the life of a local adventurer. Davis was a flyer but he was also a yarnspinner—“the train tore down the tracks and tooted its tooter”—and a speculator who bought and sold surplus aircraft after World War II.
Davis built and operated Red Sails Inn
Mel Freilicher’s ‘American Cream’: Rewriting the Radical Past to Redeem the Future
Mining the Heart of the American Left to Address Today’s Bleak Realpolitik
Mel Freilicher will be reading and discussing “American Cream” in San Diego City Works Press’ Release Event at Verbatim Books, located at 3793 30th Street in North Park, on Friday, Oct. 27, at 8 p.m.
Longtime San Diego resident, writer, educator, and activist Mel Freilicher was the editor of the regional literary journal Crawl Out Your Window for 15 years and taught at San Diego State and in UCSD’s literature department for several decades. In addition to this, Mel has published in a wide range of publications and anthologies including two chapbooks on Standing Stone Press and Obscure Publications.
Televangelist Extremist Morris Cerullo Gets His Disneyland Park in Mission Valley
San Diego City Council Approves 18-Acre Christian-Themed Center
On Tuesday, October 17th, the San Diego City Council approved televangelist Morris Cerullo’s $130 – 160 million Legacy International Center project. The Center will replace the former Mission Valley Resort at 875 South Hotel Circle Drive on an 18 acre site at the west end of Mission Valley.
That’s the main headline.
But what the Council also did was approve a mini Disneyland-type of religious theme-park that will promote controversial religious tourism, owned by the head of a extremist Evangelical empire who is outspoken in his opposition to abortion and same-sex marriage,
Is the San Diego Mayor’s Office Boycotting Ocean Beach?
Is there a boycott going on by the San Diego Mayor’s Office in attending Ocean Beach community meetings?
For at least the last six months, the leaders of both the Ocean Beach Town Council and the Ocean Beach Planning Board have openly complained during their public meetings about the absence of anyone from the Mayor’s Office. I’ve sat through most of these meetings over these 6 months and have heard
Special City Council Hearing on Vacation Rentals for Oct. 23rd Is Cancelled
A special hearing by the San Diego City Council set for Monday, October 23rd, on deciding policy on short term vacation rentals has been cancelled. The cancellation – or ‘adjournment’ – was basically due to a last-minute memo from the City Attorney’s Office that raised legal questions about elements of the proposed ordinances by various members of the Council.
Mrytle Cole, President of the City Council, issued a Memo on Thursday, October 19th, that stated in part:













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