News From Around Ocean Beach and Point Loma – Mid March 2016

 Frank Gormlie  March 17, 2016  12 Comments on News From Around Ocean Beach and Point Loma – Mid March 2016

* Some Police Cameras Installed
* March 19th – Friends of OB Library Book and Yard Sale – Donations Needed
* Wife of Drowning Victim in OB Asks “What Was He Thinking?”
* Hess Brewery Dinged by Lack of Parking Citation
* Point Loma High Players and Fans Left in the Dark
* OB Elementary Principal to Kiss a Pig
* No Good Leads in Parrots Killings – Issue to Be Addressed at OB Town Council Meet
* New Construction Fence Around Former Doctors’ Offices – the Future “OB Plaza”
* OB Chili Cook-Off Contestants Needed
* Chapter One Tattoo Parlor Opens
* Hookah Parlor Closes
* Dog Lost at Sea Returned to San Diego Owner 5 Weeks Later
* Two Local Women Beaten Up by Female Traveler
* OB Picked as “Best” Neighborhood of a Large City

Continue Reading News From Around Ocean Beach and Point Loma – Mid March 2016

Just How Many Breweries Can Ocean Beach Handle?

 Frank Gormlie  March 17, 2016  23 Comments on Just How Many Breweries Can Ocean Beach Handle?

With 3 New Breweries About to Open on Newport, Is OB Becoming Another Pacific Beach?

Just how many breweries or beer tasting storefronts can Ocean Beach take? Just how many beer joints can Newport handle? These are the questions that are paramount on the minds of those OBceans who understand what’s happening on Newport Avenue, the main commercial drag in the village.

We ask the questions, because as of right now, there are 3 (that’s right – three) new beer breweries about to open on Newport. Actually, they’re not all real “breweries” – as two will be beer tasting rooms. A real brewery has to actually brew the sudsy stuff on site.

Everyone knows that the OB Brewery on lower Newport is about to open. We’ve been talking about the place as it has an exterior railing that has upset some in the community as an unnecessary encroachment into public space. The place is owned by the folks who own Newport Pizza, across the street.

Now, there are 2 new beer places about to open. Each has their alcohol notice taped to the doors.

Continue Reading Just How Many Breweries Can Ocean Beach Handle?

Somebody Is Politely Upset Over Abbott and Voltaire Condo Project

 Frank Gormlie  March 16, 2016  25 Comments on Somebody Is Politely Upset Over Abbott and Voltaire Condo Project

Polite Graffiti Sprayed on Construction Fence

The OB Rag was informed by the company that is building the condo project at Voltaire and Abbott that their construction fence was tagged with what they called “some pretty polite graffiti”.

Sometime late Monday night perhaps, March 14th, somebody or somebodies sprayed messages expressing discontent over the planned project, being developed by the group, Three on Abbott. The project includes 3 two-story condos. And unfortunately for the neighbors who have been parking on the dirt lot that is now fenced-in for literally decades, that convenience is now gone forever.

Three on Abbott notified us by email of the tagging, sent us photos, and asked us to remind the community that –

this project was approved by the Ocean Beach Planning Board in a monumental vote of 11-3 and that the board is elected and run by residents of Ocean Beach.

Continue Reading Somebody Is Politely Upset Over Abbott and Voltaire Condo Project

OB Historical Society Presents: The Beloved Wisteria Cottage – Mar. 17

 Staff  March 16, 2016  0 Comments on OB Historical Society Presents: The Beloved Wisteria Cottage – Mar. 17

On March 17th the Ocean Beach Historical Society celebrates Spring with a program about the history and O.B. spirit of the beloved Wisteria Cottage and it’s famous 100 plus year-old vines.

Join the OBHS at the P.L. United Methodist Church, 1984 Sunset Cliffs Blvd., in O.B. of course, at 7pm.

Continue Reading OB Historical Society Presents: The Beloved Wisteria Cottage – Mar. 17

Get Rid of Your Toxic Teflon

 Source  March 16, 2016  0 Comments on Get Rid of Your Toxic Teflon

Teflon-frying-pansIt’s time to ditch nonstick cookware — and then reform our laws.

By Jill Richardson / Otherwords

Teflon, you might have heard, may cause cancer.

The culprit was a toxic, now retired compound called PFOA. Also known as C8, the chemical became the subject of a major lawsuit accusing DuPont — the manufacturer of the popular nonstick coating — of sickening thousands of Americans.

Yet Teflon is still on the market, The Intercept reports, with a secret new active ingredient.

Continue Reading Get Rid of Your Toxic Teflon

Ireland: an 800 Year Political Struggle

 Michael Steinberg  March 16, 2016  1 Comment on Ireland: an 800 Year Political Struggle

The following article originally appeared in 1988 in Justice Speaks, a publication of Black Workers For Justice, in North Carolina.

by Michael Steinberg

On November 29th [1988] the European Court of Human Rights ruled that a British law allowing Britain to detain suspects for up to 7 days without charging them is a breach of the European Convention of Human Rights. The court’s decision is a blow to Britain’s attempts to crush the 800-year old Irish national movement. While the British government incorrectly portrays this as a religious conflict, in reality it is a political struggle for liberation and independence from British rule.

Continue Reading Ireland: an 800 Year Political Struggle

San Diego Police and FBI Drove Local Black Panthers Underground

 Frank Gormlie  March 15, 2016  5 Comments on San Diego Police and FBI Drove Local Black Panthers Underground

Union-Tribune Finally “Finds” San Diego’s Black Panthers

In a very decent February 28 article about San Diego’s Black Panthers penned by Peter Rowe of the San Diego U-T, some of the city’s turbulent civil rights and Black power movement history from the Sixties and Seventies was uncovered.

First, it’s amazing to some San Diegans, including Rowe, that San Diego even had a Black Panther chapter back in the day. And that’s a credit that the San Diego Union and Tribune themselves can claim, for the coverage of local Panthers and the civil rights movement in general was skewed due to the right-wing – and yes, racist – policies and bias of its owners and editors. Think the Copley family, who ran the city’s only pair of dailies for decades.

But now thanks to Rowe, some of this history has been dusted off and bared for all to read. Much of the article recounts the experiences of one Henry Lee Wallace, now 64 and still in San Diego, but back then, a member of the local Panthers.

Continue Reading San Diego Police and FBI Drove Local Black Panthers Underground

Why Climate Change Action Cannot Succeed Without Social Equity

 Source  March 15, 2016  1 Comment on Why Climate Change Action Cannot Succeed Without Social Equity

Social-Equity-graphicBy Murtaza H. Baxamusa / San Diego UrbDeZine

Over 120 cities and counties in California have a climate action plan either completed or in the pipeline. As cities develop these plans and initiatives to address climate change, it is important to emphasize that social equity is integrated within environmental policies.

The vulnerabilities, resilience and sustainability of the human ecosystem are as much determined by diversity and interdependence as its natural counterpart. As Pope Francis said inLaudato Sí, “a true ecological approach always becomes a social approach; it must integrate questions of justice in debates on the environment, so as to hear both the cry of the earth and the cry of the poor.”

Sustainability is framed as a three-legged stool consisting of the three ‘E’s: environment, economy and equity. However, the third leg, social and economic equity, is often the weakest.

Continue Reading Why Climate Change Action Cannot Succeed Without Social Equity

Police Body Camera Footage Must Be Made Public

 Source  March 15, 2016  1 Comment on Police Body Camera Footage Must Be Made Public

By Rob Tindula

police body camera photoA few weeks ago, the City Attorney’s Office released an 11-page memo outlining the public disclosure of police records, including body camera footage.

The report stated that the Mayor has exclusive rights when it comes to releasing the department’s body camera footage to the public and listed a number broad of exemptions to go along with it.

This is unfortunate for all San Diego residents. Police body cameras have the ability to increase the accountability of officers while performing their daily duties because video evidence can provide an unbiased account of what happened at the scene.

Continue Reading Police Body Camera Footage Must Be Made Public

City of San Diego’s Program for Outdoor Cafes

 Frank Gormlie  March 14, 2016  24 Comments on City of San Diego’s Program for Outdoor Cafes

The City of San Diego has had a program for a decade now, that allows merchants and restaurants to use the sidewalks in front of their businesses.

It’s called the Public Right of Way (PROW) Program and was passed unanimously by the San Diego Planning Commission in March of 2006.

The program – according to the City’s new info website – allows:

“… merchants with ground-level storefronts in the twelve Business Improvement Districts (BIDs) will now be able to use the sidewalks in front of their businesses to place A-frame signs, limited displays of merchandise, and outdoor cafes without railings. ” (Our emphasis.)

The main Ocean Beach commercial district has such a BID – the OB Mainstreet Association.

Continue Reading City of San Diego’s Program for Outdoor Cafes

Meet Sarah Saez: Candidate for San Diego City Council District 9

 Jim Miller  March 14, 2016  0 Comments on Meet Sarah Saez: Candidate for San Diego City Council District 9

Sarah-Saez-Organizer-225x300By Jim Miller

Sarah Saez is best known locally for her work on the heroic United Taxi Drivers of San Diego campaign. As labor leader Richard Barrera noted after their big win in 2014:

The victory by UTWSD comes five years after drivers, improperly classified as independent contractors and without NLRB recognition, came together and organized a strike to protest their wages, benefits and working conditions.

Despite constant harassment, retaliation and intimidation by permit holders and dispatch companies over the last five years, and despite obstruction by public agencies, these workers stuck together, fought back against injustice, and prevailed.

Continue Reading Meet Sarah Saez: Candidate for San Diego City Council District 9

Midway Planners Hold Election on March 16th

 Source  March 14, 2016  0 Comments on Midway Planners Hold Election on March 16th

By Tony de Garate

At a critical — perhaps even historic — time for the Midway community, two positions are available to serve on a volunteer citizen board that is overseeing an effort to determine what growth will look like for the next two decades.

The Midway Community Planning Group will host the balloting March 16 from 2:30 to 3 p.m. in the downstairs lobby of the West City Campus of San Diego Community College, Continuing Education, 3249 Fordham St. The group’s regular monthly meeting will follow upstairs in Room 205.

Both voters and candidates must live, own property or operate a business in the Midway Community Planning Area. Candidates, in addition, must have attended a meeting in the past year. To appear on the printed ballot, hopefuls must email Melanie Nickel, the group’s chair, by March 14 at MelanieN@stanfordalumni.org. Those who miss the deadline may run as write-ins.

Continue Reading Midway Planners Hold Election on March 16th