Calling on SANDAG to Invest in Better Transit, Safer Streets, Good Jobs and Clean Air

 Source  February 5, 2016  3 Comments on Calling on SANDAG to Invest in Better Transit, Safer Streets, Good Jobs and Clean Air

EHC Monique

Will SANDAG’s proposed sales tax increase serve your community’s needs?

By Monique López / Environmental Health Coalition

We all need to move. How we get from place to place is deeply connected to our quality of life.

Unfortunately, not all communities have the same access to healthy, safe, reliable and affordable transportation options, such as public transit and biking and walking paths.

Continue Reading Calling on SANDAG to Invest in Better Transit, Safer Streets, Good Jobs and Clean Air

Tiny Village of Tiny Shelters for San Diego Homeless: Small is the New Sexy

 Source  February 5, 2016  2 Comments on Tiny Village of Tiny Shelters for San Diego Homeless: Small is the New Sexy

Danielles Tiny HomeBy Jeeni Criscenzo

No question about it—being involved in a coalition to build a tiny village of tiny shelters for people who are without a place to live, is damn exciting!

I can’t put my finger on exactly why this is taking over my brain activity—from waking up in the morning ready to get online and share ideas, to dreaming about it at night.

Maybe it’s what someone at our community meeting last week said about it—tiny homes are sexy!

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Is This Encroachment Into Our Public Space?

 Frank Gormlie  February 4, 2016  50 Comments on Is This Encroachment Into Our Public Space?

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Take a look at these photos …

This is The Joint at the intersection of Newport and Cable setting up an outside eating area.

We’ve been contacted by a reader who objects to this encroachment on more than half of the public sidewalk by both The Joint and the soon-to-be-open OB Brewery closer to the ocean.

Here is what reader “CG” says:

The sidewalk expansion of several restaurants is starting to impede pedestrians, and I noticed just recently that The Joint on Cable and Newport has staked out a large area for future tables with metal fencing with permanent posts in the cement.

The Joint is at the busiest corner of the Farmer’s Market at Newport and Cable. . They’ve clearly claimed more than half of the sidewalk without regard the other obstacles like the water meter, street light, and traffic light.

With the street light and a water meter also on the sidewalk and just opposite, I don’t see how anyone in a wheelchair can pass without asking others to move. And, I’m also concerned about the foot traffic being impacted on that corner during Farmers’ Market or just regular foot traffic on a sunny day.

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A Fresh Start for Gilmore Jewelers after Ocean Beach Icon Moves to Liberty Station

 Matthew Wood  February 4, 2016  11 Comments on A Fresh Start for Gilmore Jewelers after Ocean Beach Icon Moves to Liberty Station

Gary Gilmore move mw 02

By Matthew Wood

Fear not, fans of Gilmore Jewelers. The iconic shop is still in business. It’s just a bit tougher to find, and that’s just the way Gary Gilmore likes it.

Continue Reading A Fresh Start for Gilmore Jewelers after Ocean Beach Icon Moves to Liberty Station

A Call for OBceans and Point Lomans to Support “the Conscience of OB”

 Frank Gormlie  February 3, 2016  13 Comments on A Call for OBceans and Point Lomans to Support “the Conscience of OB”

Ben Franklin press

Michael Turko of the well-known “Turko Files” once said that the OB Rag “is the conscience of OB.”

We are humbled by his compliment. And we also think that if you – dear reader – peruse the following list of gains and achievements for Ocean Beach that the OB Rag was instrumental in making happen, then you, too, would agree with Turko.

And if you do agree with Turko, then we appeal to you to support our efforts to maintain an online newspaper for Ocean Beach and the Peninsula.

Consider these:

Saving the OB Library. The OB Rag was instrumental in helping save the OB Library from closing its doors when it was on Mayor Sanders’ butcher block.

Continue Reading A Call for OBceans and Point Lomans to Support “the Conscience of OB”

OB Planning Board Agenda – Wed., Feb. 3

 Staff  February 3, 2016  0 Comments on OB Planning Board Agenda – Wed., Feb. 3

Feb. Meeting Is Last Meeting for Any Potential Board Candidates to Attend to Qualify

Here is the agenda for the OB Planning Board’s monthly meeting, which meets Wednesday night, February 3rd, at the OB Recreation Center, located at 4722 Santa Monica Ave. The meeting usually begins very close to 6pm.

Of note is the fact that this meeting is the last meeting any potential Board candidate may attend in order to qualify. All candidates must have attended at least one Board meeting before the Board’s annual election on March 2nd in order to qualify as a Board candidate. 7 of the Board’s 14 seats are up for grabs.

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Are the Planets in Alignment Causing Me to Be Out of Alignment?

 Judi Curry  February 3, 2016  15 Comments on Are the Planets in Alignment Causing Me to Be Out of Alignment?

By Judi Curry

I’m not usually a negative person.

I try to find something positive in even the worse situation, but for the past few weeks it seems that nothing is going right in my life.

Maybe it is because February, a month that used to hold romantic overtones is here, and there are none of those happenings going to occur. No one on Valentine’s Day to send me a box of my favorite candy; in fact no one to send me a card. OK – maybe I’ll receive one from my family, but that is not what I am talking about.

My birthday is also in February. That in itself is a traumatic day for the obvious reasons, …

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The Face of Homelessness in San Diego

 John Lawrence  February 3, 2016  6 Comments on The Face of Homelessness in San Diego

San Diego Has the Fourth Highest Number of Homeless in the US and that Doesn’t Even Count Most Homeless Families

homeless familyBy John Lawrence

I met a homeless woman at a coffee shop in downtown San Diego. She had emailed me to correct a few points in a previous article I had written about the homeless. Her name is Jingles, not her real name, of course.

That’s the name she goes by downtown. She’s tough, savvy, intelligent, resourceful, wise to the ways of the street. She is 55 years old with several health related problems and three small dogs.

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Local Gardens: A Healthy Way to Build Communities

 Source  February 3, 2016  0 Comments on Local Gardens: A Healthy Way to Build Communities

Community garden Jaxport via Flickr

By Jill Richardson / Common Dreams

Mark Winne, an author and anti-hunger activist, often says that the most important word in “community garden” isn’t “garden.” I saw this firsthand not long ago.

Standing in the sun between several small garden plots all morning, it may not have looked like much was going on. A few people stood in a circle, chatting. Occasionally, one would leave, or another would arrive. Several others were nearby, working in their garden plots.

Some of the people were black. Some were white. And two — a mother and child — appeared Southeast Asian.

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Ocean Beach and Point Loma News – Early February 2016

 Frank Gormlie  February 2, 2016  9 Comments on Ocean Beach and Point Loma News – Early February 2016

15 IPads Stolen From Special Needs Students at Pioneer Day School

Motorist Killed by Falling Tree in PB On Her Way to Play Music in Ocean Beach

Does Councilwoman Zapf Enjoy Her Job?

Some OB Businesses Still Recovering From First Storm

Urbanization, financial backlog hurt flood control

Lifeguards and City Agree on Extended Health Care

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Pinyon-Juniper Forests: BLM is a Ranching Industry Tool

 Source  February 2, 2016  2 Comments on Pinyon-Juniper Forests: BLM is a Ranching Industry Tool

Public lands ranching is destroying the Western United States

Cattle watering station near Cave Valley, NVCattle watering station near Cave Valley, NV (Photo: Max Wilbert)

By Will Falk/ San Diego Free Press

Public lands ranching is destroying the Western United States. It has pushed native plant species to the brink of extinction. It causes soil to erode so quickly the land cannot keep up. Livestock are poisoning and depleting water supplies, killing perennial stream flows, and are making it increasingly difficult for surface water to accumulate.

Stockmen and the animals they raise have devastated populations of iconic American animals like bison, elk, pronghorn, and sage-grouse.

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