Diver Drowning in Navy Dolphin Program Should Never Have Happened

 Source  May 6, 2014  21 Comments on Diver Drowning in Navy Dolphin Program Should Never Have Happened

Failed Program Has Drowned Dozens of Dolphins and Now San Diego Civilian

By Rick Trout / May 6, 2014

The recent drowning of Navy dolphin worker/Science Application International Corp. employee, 29 year old Coll Perske, during nighttime rehearsals for deployment of American dolphins into Black Sea waters near Ukraine’s turbulent coast is made even more tragic knowing that Congress tried to eliminate this ill-conceived program in 1992.

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News Around the Beach – Early May 2014

 Staff  May 6, 2014  6 Comments on News Around the Beach – Early May 2014

Poway Student Organizes High School Proms Away From SeaWorld Zach Affolter is a young San Diego area activist in support of Orcas held by SeaWorld. …

The 66th Annual Ocean Beach Kiwanis Kite Festival and Craft Fair Is Saturday, May 10th!

Film night at The Green Store Documents Harvey Milk – Thursday, May 8th at 7 pm

Worker Trapped by Overturned Crane on Point Loma A man is in the hospital with serious injuries after the crane he was operating tipped over while lifting a cargo load ….

Judge to rule on De Anza Cove settlement Tuesday
From KPBS: This week San Diego could see an end to the legal battle over removing a mobile home development from Mission Bay Park. …

and much more …

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Scripps Professor Talks About Sea-Level Rise at San Diego Beaches

 Source  May 6, 2014  1 Comment on Scripps Professor Talks About Sea-Level Rise at San Diego Beaches

Adapting to a Changing Ocean: The Future of Our Beaches

Falk Feddersen researches the implications of sea-level rise on our beaches.

By Mario C. Aguilera / Scripps Institute of Oceanography / May 02, 2014

Falk Feddersen is an acting professor of coastal physical oceanography at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego. His studies on various aspects of coastal and nearshore oceanography—spanning waves, currents, turbulence, and biological processes— have helped further the scientific understanding of how pollution moves across coastlines. His research includes instrument development, observations, theory, modeling, and extensive field work. He received his Ph.D. from Scripps in 1999.

What is your role in researching sea-level rise and its implications?

I study how waves come into the beach, break, and dissipate their energy, as well as how sand moves from the top of the beach all the way out to many hundreds of yards offshore. The processes that I’m studying happen on time scales anywhere from an hour to a couple of months. The time scale for sea-level rise is, of course, much longer than this—on the order of decades to a century. With climate change there is also very likely going to be increased storms and wave activity, which is going to act to reconfigure the beach much more strongly than is happening right now, along with sea-level rise.

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April 2014 – Extreme Weather Watch: Tornadoes, Flash Floods Pound US

 Source  May 6, 2014  0 Comments on April 2014 – Extreme Weather Watch: Tornadoes, Flash Floods Pound US

159 Tornadoes, 35 Deaths as Torrential Rain and Flash Floods Pound East, South and Midwest

Extreme Weather WatchBy John Lawrence / San Diego Free Press

The last week in April saw extreme weather over as much as half the nation. Over 20 states were affected. In some places a month’s worth of rain fell in a day. In New York City there was close to 5 inches of rain in one day. In Pensacola, FL there was over 20 inches of rain in 24 hours, 6 inches in one hour alone, more rain than Los Angeles saw all last year. More rain fell in Pensacola than during Hurricane Ivan. There were nearly 6000 lightning strikes in fifteen minutes. First responders rescued people in boats. Roads and bridges collapsed.

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A Look at a “Dangerous Friendship”

 Ernie McCray  May 6, 2014  2 Comments on A Look at a “Dangerous Friendship”

By Ernie McCray

unnamedA couple of years ago at a showing of “Sing Your Song,” a documentary that highlights Harry Belafonte’s role in pursuits for human and civil rights, I met Ben Kamin, a scholar who has written much about the social struggles of those times. I just finished reading, with delight, his latest book, “Dangerous Friendship.”

The book puts the spotlight on Stanley Levison, a little known figure in the civil rights movement, who fully dedicated his life to helping Martin Luther King.

Regarding this man, Clarence Jones, another prominent aide to Martin, says “I am extremely upset, and I get angry, 24/7, and have been for many years about the glaring omission of the name and history of Stanley Levison in the civil rights chronicle.”

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The Unbearable Annoyance of Neighborhood Tattling Over Chickens

 Source  May 6, 2014  3 Comments on The Unbearable Annoyance of Neighborhood Tattling Over Chickens

We all need to cut our neighbors some slack, even if they’re urban chicken farmers.

urban chickenBy / OtherWords

I met my friend Rachel because we were both in the same situation: We each had neighbors who inexplicably hated our chickens. Rachel and I each had small flocks of hens, no roosters, and sprawling, fertile, organic vegetable gardens in our yards. And we live in urban San Diego.

There certainly are reasons you might complain about chickens living next door in the city. If they’re noisy, smelly, or unhygienic, that’s a problem. If their owners let them escape into your yard, that’s a problem.

And I’m guessing that you might not like glancing out your window to behold your neighbor killing chickens in the back yard, either.

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OB Planning Board Meets Wed, May 7th

 Staff  May 5, 2014  0 Comments on OB Planning Board Meets Wed, May 7th

Here is the agenda for Wednesday’s – May 7 – meeting of the OB Planning Board. Peter Ruscitti is the new Chair and John Ambert the new vice-chair. This is the monthly meeting of the Board, and it meets at 6pm sharp in the meeting room at the OB Recreation Center, 4726 Santa Monica Avenue.

Action Item No. 2 is the second appearance and presentation/ vote on the Brito project at 4626 Cape May Avenue. The owner-applicant is proposing to build a new residence over an existing garage – and they wish to maintain the front 1298 square foot residence, and construct a new residence with 1220 square feet over the detached garage, which is 704 square feet.

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Orca Profiles in Captivity: No. 6 of the San Diego 10

 Source  May 5, 2014  10 Comments on Orca Profiles in Captivity: No. 6 of the San Diego 10

(Sixth in a series)

By Cara Wilson-Granat

This is the sixth in a series of ten in which we meet one of the San Diego 10 orcas and hear from an advocate who continues to be one of the voices of these imprisoned voiceless, never stopping until the whole world listens.

This week’s Advocate is Steve Christianson. After reading about Prisoner #6, Shouka, please scroll down this article and “meet” one of the top San Diego 10 Prisoner Advocates. [Here is Prisoner Orca Profile #1 and #2, #3 ,4 and #5 .]

Prisoner #6: Shouka

Age: 21

Imagine living in quiet desperation in solitary confinement for 10 YEARS. Pretty horrendous, right? The crime for such enforced aloneness? Nothing more than being held captive by those who considered her merely a source of entertainment and breeding opportunity for them. Nothing else. Just a money commodity. That’s Shouka’s story–the first orca to be born at Marineland in Antibes, France on February 25, 1993.

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Remember the Folks Who Brought You the 8-Hour Day?

 Jim Miller  May 5, 2014  1 Comment on Remember the Folks Who Brought You the 8-Hour Day?

By Jim Miller

8hours1Last week, May Day came and went and, while there was a small march downtown, most people barely noticed. Indeed most Americans don’t know much about May Day and if they do, they associate it with the state sponsored holiday in the former Soviet Union.

The truth of the matter is, however, that May Day has deep American roots. It started in 1866 as part of the movement pushing for the 8-hour day.

As historian Jacob Remes reminds us:

The demand for an eight-hour day was about leisure, self-improvement and freedom, but it was also about power. When Eight Hour Leagues agitated for legislation requiring short hours, they were demanding what had never before happened: that the government regulate industry for the advantage of workers.

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Seduced and Reduced By The Weather

 Source  May 5, 2014  3 Comments on Seduced and Reduced By The Weather

d-solarBy Bob Dorn / San Diego Free Press

Aren’t we really just being chumps for weather reports?

Last week was hell. I tuned in every night to the weather forecasts, and that for me IS hell; all that almost-innocent T&A, witless humor and mirthless studio laughter, chartreuse simulations of doppler radar defining drizzle somewhere I don’t live, the pictures of puppies being sprayed in the back yard… these people get paid to do this stuff.

(I’ll bet the guys who managed to choose ‘lectric chartreuse don’t get paid as much as the on-air hooters and hootees do.)

These people are all over the map, without a weather map.

Let’s get to the 7-day summary.

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Our Endorsements for the June 2014 Election

 Frank Gormlie  May 3, 2014  7 Comments on Our Endorsements for the June 2014 Election

We met, we debated and we agreed, mostly. Here are the people we’d like you to vote for in the June 2014 primary.

DON”T FORGET TO VOTE!

 

SDFP Clipout Guide

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High-rise the Big Issue at District 2 Candidate Forum in Clairemont

 Staff  May 2, 2014  14 Comments on High-rise the Big Issue at District 2 Candidate Forum in Clairemont

Candidates for the District 2 City Council seat, primarily Sarah Boot and Lorie Zapf, confronted the major issue in Clairemont these days, high-rise buildings along the east-side of I-5 at a candidate forum on Thursday, May1st.

The big issue: a proposal to remove a 30-foot building height limit that currently exists along the west side of Clairemont and Bay Park. The U-T San Diego reported that around 200 people attended a candidate forum in Clairemont hosted by the Clairemont Town Council and moderated by Janet Poutré, who publishes the Clairemont Community News, where this was the main issue.

The height limit removal that was proposed would go up in neighborhoods east of Interstate 5, where MTS is planning a new trolley line along Morena Boulevard, just west of the freeway. It will run up to UCSD eventually by 2018. And part of the plan is tob uild high-rises along the transit corridor. Up to 6 story buildings were envisioned – as a way to offset the funds spent on the new trolley line.

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