Judge Revokes Bail for DUI Driver Who Seriously Injured 5-Year Old in Liberty Station

 Source  September 16, 2025  1 Comment on Judge Revokes Bail for DUI Driver Who Seriously Injured 5-Year Old in Liberty Station

by Neal Putnam / Peninsula Beacon / Sept. 15, 2025

A judge has denied bail to an driver who allegedly struck a 5-year-old girl while driving recklessly onto a pedestrian path in the Liberty Station area, causing the girl to be rushed to a hospital for a traumatic head injury.

Savannah Monique Taylor, 21, pleaded not guilty on Sept. 10 to two felony drunk driving charges involving the Sept. 6 incident that injured the girl while she was riding a scooter.

The girl was taken to Rady Children’s Hospital for emergency brain surgery. One charge said she had become comatose due to a brain injury.

Continue Reading Judge Revokes Bail for DUI Driver Who Seriously Injured 5-Year Old in Liberty Station

Restaurant Review: ‘So Good’ Thai Cuisine in the Midway

 Source  September 16, 2025  0 Comments on Restaurant Review: ‘So Good’ Thai Cuisine in the Midway

So Good
3960 West Point Loma Blvd., Suite F,
San Diego
92110

By LK Bruce

I’m not entirely sure why, but restaurants in strip malls always stir a sense of apprehension in me. I guess I’m afraid they’ll have the atmosphere of the parking lot. But most of the time that apprehension is easily dispelled once you close the door behind you, such is the effort these restaurant owners make to help you feel cocooned and apart from the busy-ness outside.

That was certainly my experience at So Good, a not so new Thai place that replaced the Thai place before that about seven months ago. You step in and immediately are absorbed into the serene setting of warm wood and coffee-colored leather. Small but not cramped it holds eight tables, three cushy booths, and a three-stool bar.

Continue Reading Restaurant Review: ‘So Good’ Thai Cuisine in the Midway

City Council Enacts Paid Parking in Balboa Park But Delays Start Date and Grants Some Concessions

 Source  September 16, 2025  3 Comments on City Council Enacts Paid Parking in Balboa Park But Delays Start Date and Grants Some Concessions

By David Garrick / San Diego Union-Tribune / September 16, 2025

The San Diego City Council voted 6-2 Monday to begin charging parking fees in Balboa Park for the first time, but council members delayed the start date by several months and granted many park users some major concessions.

The concessions and the delayed start — from Oct. 6 to sometime in early 2026 — will cost the city several million dollars that officials had been counting on to balance their budget and avoid emergency cuts.

The concessions include allowing San Diego High School students to park for free, and making quarterly and annual passes available for frequent park users who play bridge, lawn bowl or participate in other activities.

Monday’s compromise, which was approved after a contentious public hearing that lasted more than four hours, calls for significantly higher fees for people living outside the city of San Diego than previous proposals.

People living outside the city will pay $16 a day to park in lots closest to the park’s center and $10 a day to park in lots a bit farther out. Those are up from $12 a day and $6 a day proposed by Mayor Todd Gloria.

Continue Reading City Council Enacts Paid Parking in Balboa Park But Delays Start Date and Grants Some Concessions

Reader Rant: ‘Not Okay for City to Allow Wealthy Donors from La Jolla to Keep Only Their Library Open on Mondays’

 Source  September 15, 2025  3 Comments on Reader Rant: ‘Not Okay for City to Allow Wealthy Donors from La Jolla to Keep Only Their Library Open on Mondays’

The following is a letter to the editors of San Diego Union-Tribune by OBcean Steve Pond, published Sunday, September 14.

La Jolla library hours are a telling comment on City Hall

Re “La Jolla Library maintains Monday hours with a little help from its Friends” (Sept 4) [see below]: The wealthy community members of the would-be “city of La Jolla” stepped up and donated enough money to keep their community library open on Mondays.

That seems to be OK with the San Diego City Council, but what about the rest of us? If the city had some kind of fair rules and guidelines, the La Jolla donors would have to donate the funds to the city of San Diego to be placed into a city library hind where donations were collected for all nine council districts.

This seems to be a clear case of the “haves” and “have nots.”

Steve Pond, Ocean Beach

Here’s the original SDU-T article, pubished in their La Jolla Light:

Continue Reading Reader Rant: ‘Not Okay for City to Allow Wealthy Donors from La Jolla to Keep Only Their Library Open on Mondays’

Cottonwood Sand Mine in Rancho San Diego Unanimously Rejected by Board of Supervisors

 Source  September 15, 2025  0 Comments on Cottonwood Sand Mine in Rancho San Diego Unanimously Rejected by Board of Supervisors

By Paul Levikow / East County Magazine / Sept. 10, 2025

The Cottonwood Sand Mine project in Rancho San Diego was rejected unanimously Wednesday by the San Diego County Board of Supervisors.

In a packed board room, the supervisors heard from more than 100 speakers in a span of over two hours, including more than a dozen by phone.

The vote apparently means the end of a years-running saga for East County residents since sand mining along the Sweetwater River was first proposed seven years ago.

In July, the San Diego County Planning Commission voted to deny a Major Use Permit and Reclamation Plan for the project. That led the project applicant, Cottonwood Cajon ES, LLC, to appeal the decision to the Board of Supervisors.

The project proposed converting part of the Cottonwood Golf Club on Willow Glen Drive in unincorporated El Cajon into a 10-year sand mining operation, with an additional two-year reclamation period.

Once word got out that the plan would involve sand excavation and processing on 214 acres of a 280-acre site, and that the operation would run from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday for 10 years, opposition proved fast, furious and focused.

Continue Reading Cottonwood Sand Mine in Rancho San Diego Unanimously Rejected by Board of Supervisors

‘Let’s Talk Affordable Housing’

 Source  September 15, 2025  1 Comment on ‘Let’s Talk Affordable Housing’

Email Letter to Mayor and San Diego City Council

By Lisa Mortensen

Good morning Councilmembers:

I wanted to congratulate you, Councilmember Moreno, for pushing forward legislation through the council to launch a $5 million fund to buy apartment complexes in order to preserve existing affordable structures.  While this is a good start, I want to pull back the lens and take a big picture view of some pitfalls that could hamstring your truly earnest efforts.

First off, will the city do its due-diligence when considering making an investment like this?  Because let’s face it, the city’s track record in buying real estate has been extremely costly and not profitable.  If the city continues their approach to real estate investing, it would be doubtful that $5 million dollars would go very far and we hope that the city will spare San Diegans any further taxpayer bailout.

This good intention of yours, Ms. Moreno, will be blindsided by the mayor’s upcoming push to pass the Preservation and Progress program that actually will eliminate any protections for properties more than 45 years old, properties designated as historical, and/or certified as Mills Act.

Continue Reading ‘Let’s Talk Affordable Housing’

More Tall Buildings Likely in San Diego If Governor Signs Controversial Senate Bill 79

 Source  September 15, 2025  2 Comments on More Tall Buildings Likely in San Diego If Governor Signs Controversial Senate Bill 79

By Ben Christopher / CalMatters Times of San Diego / Sept. 13, 2025

California lawmakers just laid the groundwork for a highly targeted building boom.

Senate Bill 79, authored by San Francisco Democrat Sen. Scott Wiener, would “upzone” neighborhoods immediately surrounding train, light rail and subway stations in many of the state’s most populous metro areas. That means apartment developers will be able to construct residential buildings — some as tall as 75 feet — regardless of what local zoning maps, elected officials or density-averse neighbors say.

In a legislative year teeming with controversial housing bills designed to kick-start more construction in California, SB 79 has been among the most controversial. Because it would override the planning decisions of local governments, the bill had to overcome opposition from a host of city governments and their defenders in the Legislature, while fracturing the Capitol’s reigning Democratic Party over questions of affordability, labor standards and who ultimately has the final say over what gets built where.

The bill now heads to Gov. Gavin Newsom – supporters expect he will sign it.

Continue Reading More Tall Buildings Likely in San Diego If Governor Signs Controversial Senate Bill 79

The New Christianity Has Its First Martyr

 Source  September 15, 2025  13 Comments on The New Christianity Has Its First Martyr

By Joni Halpern

It was said of the vitriolic commentator, Charlie Kirk, that he died for his faith, making him a Christian martyr. Having never listened to his performance before, I decided to do so, thinking perhaps his was the voice of Christian heroism. It has been said he was a man who sacrificed his life because he chose to follow in the footsteps of Christ himself, a path seen by many Christians and non-Christians alike as a challenging but inspiring quest to understand the power of love.

What I discovered from Charlie Kirk’s program was a Christian message I did not recognize. It was a forceful commentary spoken by a “preacher,” but bearing no resemblance to the compassionate life of that first and truest martyr of Christianity. Instead, it was an icy, sharply worded voice that cut like a butcher knife into the already inflamed flesh of my countrymen, drawing blood with every strike.

It was the New Christianity, a narrative woven with the dominant themes of fear and vengeance. A “Get them before they get you” message that invites followers to the precipice of taking arms, and then leaves them at the edge, their toes gripping the ledge, their arms flailing for balance, waiting for the signal to leap into the abyss of civil war.

It is not just Mr. Kirk, but many others in the New Christianity who are talking up the hatred and “otherness” of fellow Americans, like a coach giving a pep talk to stir the hearts of a team that conceives of itself as losers to those who have no meritorious right to a level playing field. And whose rebuke must eventually be handed to them in bloody battle — a championship game of civil war among 340 million members of a nation-state that once took pride in our foundational preamble, “We, the people, in order to form a more perfect union…”

Continue Reading The New Christianity Has Its First Martyr

Police Seeking Public’s Help in Identifying Two Suspects in Murder in Ocean Beach- UPDATED with Photo of Victim

 Source  September 15, 2025  1 Comment on Police Seeking Public’s Help in Identifying Two Suspects in Murder in Ocean Beach- UPDATED with Photo of Victim

The San Diego Police Department is seeking the public’s help in identifying two persons of interest in the murder of the victim now identified as 22-year-old Joseph Bojorquez Jr. that occurred in Hodad’s parking lot Ocean Beach on September 10, 2025.

Continue Reading Police Seeking Public’s Help in Identifying Two Suspects in Murder in Ocean Beach- UPDATED with Photo of Victim

Ugly Comment from Staff of City Council Member to Constituent Reflects ‘Us’ Versus ‘Them’ YIMBY Attitude

 Source  September 12, 2025  18 Comments on Ugly Comment from Staff of City Council Member to Constituent Reflects ‘Us’ Versus ‘Them’ YIMBY Attitude

By Patty Ducey-Brooks

This past week, I saw direct comments from a staff member of City Councilmember Stephen Whitburn that shocked and upset me more than I expected. Though I had been reviewing previous emails on various topics, after seeing the comments from this staff person, communicating rather rudely to a member of the community, I had to respond.

What I am observing and learning is that the staff of our elected officials (mayor and down), have a growing tendency to speak in a derogatory manner to their constituents. And if you don’t agree with them, you become the enemy. Unfortunately, this appears to be the direct result of a “movement” being led by many elected officials throughout the state of California.

It appears to be associated with the YIMBY movement that has become very radical. If you don’t agree or side with their philosophy, you are the enemy. There is no middle ground. It’s also counter to providing a civil and neutral environment for quality discussion and outcomes, perhaps outcomes that can benefit most of the public at large.

Continue Reading Ugly Comment from Staff of City Council Member to Constituent Reflects ‘Us’ Versus ‘Them’ YIMBY Attitude

Adams Avenue Street Fair — Sept. 20-21

 Source  September 12, 2025  0 Comments on Adams Avenue Street Fair — Sept. 20-21

The 43rd Annual Adams Avenue Street Fair, presented by San Diego Foundation, features 75 musical acts on seven stages and is scheduled from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 20, and from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 21, 2025. Southern California’s largest free two-day music festival is held on 10 city blocks in the community of Normal Heights.

2025 headlining performers are: Mexican electronic music legends Nortec: Bostich + Fussible, Rockabilly icons Dave & Deke Combo, garage rock favorites The Schizophonics, touring Blues master Chris Cain Band, LA indie punk rockers Strawberry Fuzz, Soul all-stars The Styletones, surf-garage rockers The Creepy Creeps, dynamic female salsa band Sabrosas Latin Orchestra.

Continue Reading Adams Avenue Street Fair — Sept. 20-21