War on Red Tape Could Hurt Working People — Don’t Trash CEQA
By Lorena Gonzalez / San Diego Union-Tribune Op-Ed / July 13, 2025
Abundance.
Of course!
But abundance for whom?
The labor movement has always been supportive of dreaming big, building large projects, increasing housing supply and completing massive infrastructure projects.
That’s what union workers do — skillfully build things, advocate within our communities for government-driven investments and large infrastructure projects, and support campaigns for those investments. And, I would argue, our unions know better than anyone what happens when government-funded infrastructure projects and jobs get held up with unnecessary delays, duplicative permitting processes and red tape.
We see it with the waning interest in California high-speed rail as the delays and permitting impediments make it a punching bag for right-wing politicians. We saw it with our own members, as massive public investments by President Biden simply took too long for the effect to trickle down and be felt in terms of the good union jobs that were guaranteed.
Our main criticism with “the Abundance agenda” isn’t about what it does — in terms of reducing regulations to speed up development to increase supply — but what it fails to do. Streamlining development must be tied to labor and environmental standards so that there is a clear public benefit and not just a giveaway to developers.

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)
By Lisa Mortensen
By Kate Callen / July 14, 2025
The City of San Diego in its infinite wisdom, has just announced it is lifting the “Summer Construction Moratorium” at the beaches and in coastal neighborhoods in order to speed up “street repair”, to “save taxpayer dollars” and to “complete projects faster.”
July 9, 2025
In a city where so many big plans have gone so badly for 30 years, San Diego residents shouldn’t just be wary when another bold proposal comes along — they should be terrified.
By Danna Givot
Eligible communities include Point Loma, Ocean Beach, Bankers Hill, Middletown, Golden Hill and South Park




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