Peninsulans Are Divided Over Proposed ‘Improvements’ to Sunset Cliffs
With the San Diego City Council voting Sept. 9 on proposed improvements to Sunset Cliffs, the boulevard and the area, to save it from sea-level rise and ongoing erosion, you can bet that Peninsula residents are divided over the proposals coming out of the Coastal Resilience Master Plan. [Here’s the City’s Coastal Resiliency Masterplan]
One of the more controversial proposals is the one that wants to re-configure Sunset Cliffs Boulevard from a two-lane, north-south major collector road to a single southbound lane. One recent Rag reader rant felt it was premature to make Sunset Cliffs Blvd into one-way. There’s been other issues and questions. (See the many and diverse comments to Rag posts on the Cliffs.)
When the Plan was first rolled out, one Rag writer felt the ‘OB Presentation akin to Keystone Cops’ and another questioned, “Where is the Masterplan Board Hiding?”
Two of the more important community planning groups in the Peninsula are divided. The Ocean Beach Community Planning Group voted in favor of the plan, said Andrea Schlageter, who chairs that board. Schlageter said, in her own opinion, the plans for the one-way street add much needed room for recreation where there is no dedicated lane for pedestrians. “It’ll take the pressure off the cliff,” Schlageter said. “Whether we make it a one-way street now or let it erode into the ocean, it’ll be a one-way street eventually.”
The Peninsula Community Planning Board, on the other hand,

There’s a 36 foot giant agave plant towering over everything else along Point Loma Avenue in Ocean Beach these days. Right now it towers over other plants, trees, nearby homes, palm trees and power lines. But as agave observers know, it’s all temporary and in just months, the large stock will look much different.
by Neal Putnam / Times of San Diego –
by Zach Schonfeld /
Protests against the Trump regime took place Monday, Labor Day, across San Diego County with the largest and most significant event in downtown San Diego at Waterfront Park.
Along with promoting the importance of organized labor, Sauer said speakers focused on the November special election for Proposition 50 — an effort by Gov. Gavin Newsom to redraw California’s congressional districts to negate a similar move in Texas — Trump administration policies’ effect on working families, and how the 2026 midterm elections will be a way “to put some serious checks and balances” on them, organizers said.
By Donna Frye
Editordude: This issue of declaring a section of Mission Bay Park as “surplus land” so developers can build hundreds of homes finally hit the big time yesterday, August 31 with the following article being the lead on the front page of the San Diego Union-Tribune. The Rag has been touting this issue since early July — we even offered to hand it over to mainstream reporters over a month ago — but received no response. Former City Councilmember Donna Frye, who been has utilizing the Rag as her main platform on the issue of late, has a response to Jeff McDonald’s piece in today’s Rag.
By J.S. Whaldo

By Samantha Mason
Blendies (1830 Sunset Cliffs Blvd)
By Paul Grimes / August 29, 2025 




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