5-Year Old on Scooter Seriously Injured Outside Liberty Station on Saturday; Driver Arrested for DUI

 Staff  September 9, 2025  0 Comments on 5-Year Old on Scooter Seriously Injured Outside Liberty Station on Saturday; Driver Arrested for DUI

Tragedy struck on Saturday, September 6, around 4:40 pm when a 21-year-old woman driving a BMW sedan entered a pedestrian pathway near the entrance to Naval Base Point Loma, hit a steel bench, and then struck a 5-year old girl riding a scooter before crashing into a tree.

The girl was left with life-threatening injuries and was transported to a local hospital with severe head injuries and may not survive, authorities said.

As alcohol was a factor in the collision, the driver was arrested at the scene, located near 2500 Laning Road.

Continue Reading 5-Year Old on Scooter Seriously Injured Outside Liberty Station on Saturday; Driver Arrested for DUI

Board of Supervisors to Consider Controversial Cottonwood Sand Mine, After Years of Public Opposition — Wed., Sept. 10

 Source  September 9, 2025  0 Comments on Board of Supervisors to Consider Controversial Cottonwood Sand Mine, After Years of Public Opposition — Wed., Sept. 10

County Planning Staff and Planning Commission both recommend denial of the project

Following a nearly seven year process, including members of the public signing thousands of opposition petitions, expressing concerns at dozens of public meetings, and sending hundreds of letters detailing the many significant safety, environmental, and community impacts, the controversial Cottonwood Sand Mine proposal is scheduled to be heard by the San Diego County Board of Supervisors this Wednesday, September 10, 2025, at 9 a.m.

Following the July vote to deny the project by the County Planning Commission, the applicant filed an appeal with the Board of Supervisors.

The County’s Department of Planning & Development Services (PDS) is also recommending the project application be denied, noting that the legal findings required for a Major Use Permit cannot be made.

Both PDS and the Planning Commission cited their concerns that the project will have a harmful impact on the desired community character and the site is not suitable for a large-scale industrial sand mine. These are the same concerns Stop Cottonwood Sand Mine has raised since 2018.

Continue Reading Board of Supervisors to Consider Controversial Cottonwood Sand Mine, After Years of Public Opposition — Wed., Sept. 10

Phase 1 of Robb Field Improvements Won’t Be Completed Until 2028

 Source  September 9, 2025  1 Comment on Phase 1 of Robb Field Improvements Won’t Be Completed Until 2028

By Steven Mihailovich / Point Loma – OB Monthly SDU-T / September 8, 2025 

Though upgrades at Ocean Beach’s Robb Field appear on track to get started in the foreseeable future — raising excitement among local residents who have long anticipated them — there are still funding obstacles to overcome and the work won’t be done all at once, a San Diego city engineer cautioned in an update to the Ocean Beach Planning Board at its meeting Sept. 2.

Juliana Grotzinger, a civil engineer and project manager, said Phase I of the plan is in the design process, which is 60% complete. It is expected to reach 90% completion by March, allowing project leaders to apply for permits.

However, it’s just one step of many, she said.

City spokesman Tyler Becker said previously that the project underwent a General Development Plan amendment process in 2023 that included three public meetings and concluded with Parks and Recreation Board approval in February 2024.

A GDP amendment for any park modification “is a lengthy process,” Grotzinger said. “We can’t go to the park and just add a new facility.”

Continue Reading Phase 1 of Robb Field Improvements Won’t Be Completed Until 2028

Despite ADU Reforms, Residents in College Area Decry Insufficient Infrastructure and Lack of Communication from City

 Source  September 9, 2025  2 Comments on Despite ADU Reforms, Residents in College Area Decry Insufficient Infrastructure and Lack of Communication from City

By Calista Stocker / Mission Times Courier – Times of San Diego / Sept. 8, 2025

San Diego City Council’s accessory dwelling unit reforms went into effect on Aug. 22, but many residents of the College Area feel that the efforts are too little, too late.

The set of 25 reforms, which passed 5-4 on June 18, set new requirements and new maximums for the city’s Bonus ADU Program. Previously, the program was mostly unlimited, with the general requirement that half of the units built must be affordable. [Editordude: this is not true.]

Now, single-family homes are only permitted to add one converted ADU, one detached ADU and one junior ADU, or JADU. Other maximums include four units for lots smaller than 8,000 square feet, five units for lots between 8,001 and 10,000 square feet and six units for lots bigger than 10,000 square feet.

[Go to original for links]

Other key changes include structure distance minimums for fire safety, sidewalk requirements for Sustainable Development Areas and the allowance of ADUs to be sold separately as condominiums.

Not mentioned in the list of reforms, residents say, are their concerns about community betterment and equivalent infrastructure developments.

Continue Reading Despite ADU Reforms, Residents in College Area Decry Insufficient Infrastructure and Lack of Communication from City

A Poem: ‘The San Diego River Estuary’

 Source  September 9, 2025  0 Comments on A Poem: ‘The San Diego River Estuary’

San Diego River Estuary

By Steve Rodriguez

Can one easily tap the brakes,
slow down our ever accelerating pace
of life?  Filter the jarring noise?
Water down reliance on tech?

I offer the possibility of wandering west
through Mission Valley density.
Proceed forward under cement pillars
supporting trolley tracks and the I-5 freeway,
but this time do not press ahead
to the boisterous summer beaches lying ahead.

Continue Reading A Poem: ‘The San Diego River Estuary’

City Council to Vote Today, Tuesday, on One-Way for Sunset Cliffs Blvd and Other Proposals to Save the Cliffs

 Source  September 9, 2025  4 Comments on City Council to Vote Today, Tuesday, on One-Way for Sunset Cliffs Blvd and Other Proposals to Save the Cliffs

By Steffi Roche / CBS8 / September 7, 2025

The San Diego City Council is set to vote Tuesday on a plan proposing to save Sunset Cliffs and the coastline from sea-level rise and ongoing erosion.

The Sunset Cliffs Boulevard Project site runs from Adair Street to Ladera Street at the south end of Sunset Cliffs Boulevard and is part of the “Coastal Resilience Master Plan,” led by the City Planning Department.

The proposal is to remove parking on the cliff’s edge and reconfigure Sunset Cliffs Boulevard from a two-lane, north-south road to a single southbound lane.

The plan also includes creating a protected walkway for pedestrians and cyclists.

Continue Reading City Council to Vote Today, Tuesday, on One-Way for Sunset Cliffs Blvd and Other Proposals to Save the Cliffs

Golden Hill Activists Awaken Their Neighbors to the Threats from 6 Huge Development Projects

 Staff  September 8, 2025  6 Comments on Golden Hill Activists Awaken Their Neighbors to the Threats from 6 Huge Development Projects

Activists in the greater Golden Hill area mobilized on Sunday, Sept. 7, to bring attention to the horrendous threats of huge development projects alive in their community. There’s at least six projects in the process of construction right now, sitting in the middle of quiet residential and small business neighborhoods, telegraphing their disruption of those areas.  [Richard Santini wrote a great piece about the threats to the soul of Golden Hill on behalf of Preserve Greater Golden Hill just recently here at the Rag.]

Roughly 50 residents and supporters gathered at the children’s park at 28th and Cedar — and most of them took off for a “walk and roll” through that neighborhood of South Park with banners, signs and chants.

Continue Reading Golden Hill Activists Awaken Their Neighbors to the Threats from 6 Huge Development Projects

Sunset Cliffs Auto Show Revs Up South Ocean Beach

 Source  September 8, 2025  7 Comments on Sunset Cliffs Auto Show Revs Up South Ocean Beach

By Adam Milch

It was a lively day on Point Loma Avenue for the 3rd annual Sunset Cliffs Auto Show on Saturday, September 6. 118 cars of all shapes and sizes lined the street between Ebers St and Sunset Cliffs Blvd, along with several food trucks and other booths set up in the parking lot of St. Peter’s Church.

Live music was provided by the blues swing band Juke$, a local San Diego group that played throughout the morning. At noon, there was a 3 point basketball contest, along with a bounce house provided by the San Diego Gulls.

Next there was a Roller Derby Demo provided by the SoCal Roller Derby, a competitive WFTDA roller derby league based in San Diego. Wade Buchan spoke about three different SoCal Derby teams in the area, the Kraken, the Cuttlefish, and the Tentakills. Their next free event is a double header starting at 10:45am on Saturday, September 27 at 4S Ranch Hockey Rink against the Ventura County Derby Darlins.

The San Diego Prowlers Hot Rod Club also joined in on the action, bringing in several vehicles from Lakeside to beat the heat amongst other Hot Rod enthusiasts.

Continue Reading Sunset Cliffs Auto Show Revs Up South Ocean Beach

Sacramento’s Housing ‘Reform’ — Like SB 79 –Wrongly Targets the Sacred Power to Shape California Locally

 Source  September 8, 2025  0 Comments on Sacramento’s Housing ‘Reform’ — Like SB 79 –Wrongly Targets the Sacred Power to Shape California Locally

by Jim Newton / Cal-Matters / September 4, 2025

At least two things are true about SB 79, a bill by state Sen. Scott Wiener that would clear the way for construction of apartment buildings near transit stops in California, most pointedly including Los Angeles: It’s a bad idea, and Los Angeles has only itself to blame for it.

The fact that Wiener’s approach is both wrongheaded and entirely understandable has led to some strange reactions in California’s largest city, where unusual bedfellows have found themselves together either supporting or opposing it. A bare majority of a city council normally divided between liberals and democratic socialists came together to formally oppose the bill, the eight no votes drawing from both political camps. Supporters similarly crossed ideological lines.

Mayor Karen Bass also opposed Wiener’s bill, positing a brief statement. “While I support the intent to accelerate housing development statewide,” she said, “as written, this bill risks unintended consequences for LA.”

She was joined by her once and possibly future opponent, developer Rick Caruso, who echoed Bass’ ambivalence as well as her conclusion.

“The state is right to encourage more housing,” he said, “but it must be done with the full engagement and support of local officials and residents.”

Continue Reading Sacramento’s Housing ‘Reform’ — Like SB 79 –Wrongly Targets the Sacred Power to Shape California Locally

Let Them Take Buses: The Ugly Truth About San Diego Transit Commuting

 Staff  September 8, 2025  29 Comments on Let Them Take Buses: The Ugly Truth About San Diego Transit Commuting

By Kate Callen 

Why do San Diego’s political leaders keep pushing transit-oriented development in a city with a hopelessly inadequate transit system?

That question was at the heart of my August 29 post about commuting by bus and trolley around San Diego. Our YIMBY government claims that more people will use transit if they live closer to it. Judging by the responses to my post, proximity won’t make a bit of difference.

Simply put, the Metropolitan Transit System (MTS) does not get people where they need to go when they need to be there. The Blue, Orange and Green trolley lines are efficient, but they are linear routes with narrow reach. Most of the city must depend on a sprawl of 97 bus lines that are neither timely nor user-friendly.

For a full picture of the hardships of transit commuting, and using the excellent online MTS Trip Planner, let’s map out how the residents of two “Complete Communities” housing projects would take buses and trolleys to regional employment centers for jobs that start at 8:30 a.m.

In Point Loma, a four-story, 56-unit apartment building is planned at the busy intersection of Rosecrans and Talbot Streets. In Lomita, 37 ADU units are slated for construction at 819 Jacumba Street. Neither project will have on-site parking for residents. Both are in congested neighborhoods where street parking is already scarce.

We’ll start by commuting from Rosecrans and Talbot to Qualcomm in Sorrento Valley. You would leave at 7:00, walk to Rosecrans and Canon to catch the #28 bus to the Old Town Transit Center, take the Coaster to the Sorrento Valley station, then take the 472 Coaster connection bus to Qualcomm Building Q.

Continue Reading Let Them Take Buses: The Ugly Truth About San Diego Transit Commuting

Public Letter to Council and Mayor on Coastal Resilience Master Plan

 Source  September 8, 2025  1 Comment on Public Letter to Council and Mayor on Coastal Resilience Master Plan

To:  San Diego City Council Members and Mayor

From:  Coastal Caretakers /Lynne Miller

Item 331: Coastal Resilience Master Plan and Programmatic Environmental Impact Report.  (SEPT 9, 2025)

This Agenda has been on your calendar and cancelled several times.  Now it is the last item on the agenda.  People who live in the Ocean Beach, Sunset Cliffs, and Point Loma area have tried unsuccessfully to communicate with the ‘board’ and designers of this plan.  Requests to set up a new meeting to answer local concerns have been denied.  This behavior is consistent with unbridled building that is justified by the high-density affordable housing philosophy and new laws.

We are asking City Council Members and Staff, and the Mayor, to listen to and respond to the concerns of local neighborhoods and San Diego residents.  San Diego citizens have voiced their concerns about mandated changes through meetings, emails, letters, slideshow presentations, bound documents, appeals, and protests. Private organizations around the city are combining forces to challenge the city’s power structure, which has stripped local San Diegans of their rights. The ministerial law is clearly the government’s strategy to exclude people from making decisions about their immediate community.  Years of city planning have been systematically destroyed.  New laws provide developers with a permitting process that streamlines building and ensures a profit.

Continue Reading Public Letter to Council and Mayor on Coastal Resilience Master Plan