Center on Policy Initiatives Tries to Make San Diego County Budget More Transparent and Accessible
By Lucas Robinson / San Diego Union-Tribune / June 29, 2025
As a policy researcher, Noah Yee Yick knows more about keeping tabs on the San Diego County budget than the typical resident.
But the sprawling document, hundreds of pages long, can vex even a professional researcher like Yee Yick.
After the county released the budget in May, Yee Yick combed the pages trying to confirm that it still would fund a legal aid program for detained immigrants. But the document can be sparse on those kinds of specific details about county spending, and Yee Yick had to contact Supervisor Terra Lawson-Remer’s office to confirm the program still existed.
“That’s been one of our big frustrations,” said Yee Yick, who works for the Center on Policy Initiatives, a think tank that has long pushed for the county budget to become more transparent and better shaped by community input. “Plain and simple, it’s not accessible. It’s not transparent. It’s really difficult to know what the county’s spending money on.”
In recent years, the county has transformed and expanded how it engages the community, moves appreciated by many of the groups most tuned in to policy.
But those same groups remain frustrated by a budget document bursting with figures about complex intergovernmental revenues but short on exactly how money is spent on the ground.

RV Residents to Be Directed to “H” Barracks Lot
On July 2, United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) Locals 135, 324, 770, 1167, 1428, and 1442, together representing more than 45,000 grocery workers across Southern California, finalized a tentative agreement with Ralphs, Albertsons, Vons, and Pavilions. The agreement includes significant improvements for grocery workers, including higher wages, increased pension contributions, expanded health and welfare benefits, staffing commitments, and other key wins.
Immigration raids violate Fourth and Fifth Amendment rights of thousands of people
By Michael Chen / KGTV 

By Joni Halpern
Some Background
“STIFLES EVIDENCE AT THE FRONT DOOR”
The STRO Ordinance aims to ensure short-term rentals of less than a month are regulated.
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