Despite Community Opposition and Its Segregation-Tainted History, San Diego City Council Approves Controversial Klauber Project in Encanto
By Robert Campbell / Special to the OB Rag
In a 6-3 vote that has left all Encanto community members and advocates stunned and deeply dismayed, the San Diego City Council approved the controversial Klauber Project last night, July 15, ignoring a mountain of critical legal case law and policy violations laid out in detail by land use attorney Craig Sherman. The site is located at 1362 Klauber Avenue.
The vote bypassed not only dozens of inconsistencies with state and local law, it also faced overwhelming opposition from residents of the Chollas Valley including the Encanto and Emerald Hills neighborhoods — historically underserved, low-resource, and environmentally burdened communities. Not a single person spoke in favor of the development, with over 60 minutes of public testimony against the project and an additional 30 written statements submitted against approval. The developer declined to make any presentation or statement.
Despite urgent pleas from all community members and advocates in attendance, including myself as the Chair of the Chollas Valley Community Planning Group, along with a comprehensive legal memo from attorney Craig Sherman exposing the project’s many legal violations, the council moved forward with a decision that reflects a troubling pattern: the prioritization of development over equity, environmental justice, and community voice.

By David Garrick /
At last count, the newly formed San Diego Community Coalition comprised 25 San Diego communities plus multiple organizations that have united to exert concerted pressure on elected San Diego officials to address two intersecting issues: 1) Overbuilding incompatible ADU complexes and towers in residential neighborhoods; and 2) City Hall’s flagrant disrespect for constituents and communities.
First the bad news:
By City News Service –
By Donna Frye / Special to OB Rag
I took 10 minutes to make calls! You can do this!
Todd Gloria, mayor of San Diego, appears to have won the recent round on the city budget with both the City Council and the Municipal Employees Association — who represents most of the city’s workforce. Gloria refused to fire any of the hundreds of so-called “middle managers” in order to fill in the $350 million deficit — something the Council and MEA — and public — wanted.
By Lorena Gonzalez /
By Alexandra Mendoza and Teri Figueroa /
Thursday, July 17, 7:00 PM, the Ocean Beach Historical Society presents: From Lomaland to the Mediterranean Riviera, The Story of Sunset Cliffs and Neighboring Subdivisions, Featuring Ron May, at Waters Edge Community Center at 1984 Sunset Cliffs Blvd., O.B.
Here is the staff report, dated June 23, 2025. (all pdf files)





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