San Diego, CA
Editor's Note, September 2024: California Love | San Diego Magazine
California is built on drama. There is nothing subtle about this place, and there never was. Our landscape is the result of a hundred million years of violent plate tectonics, lava flows, ancient glaciers, and the kind of patience only Mother Earth knows. What burst forth from the combining of these dramatic forces is unlike anyplace else on Earth, rich with the best the planet has to offer: mountains, coastlines, canyons, valleys, plains, deserts, burritos.
We’re home to the largest and oldest trees in the world and the highest and lowest points in the contiguous US (within 80 miles of each other, no less. Drama). Truly, California is the main character.
Today, California is America with the volume turned up. No other state matches our energy, cultural contributions, or natural beauty. We’re home to a global entertainment industry, a global tech industry, and an economy that nearly every country envies, as well as some of the most stunning landscapes not just in the US, but anywhere.
Sure, it’s loud and it’s crowded here, but California, both as a place and as an idea, is simply unrivaled. It’s why so many people want to come to visit and to live.
So, dip us in gold and call us superfans. We love it here, which is why we’re deliriously happy to bring you our first-ever California issue. With this issue, we wanted to delve into some of what’s happening outside our county lines and offer our readers a feeling of connection to a larger community of people who call California home. There’s so much to explore.
In these pages, we’re looking at our state at large (while staying anchored in SD, of course). First, we’re going surfing with women in Santa Barbara who picked up the sport later in life, then, we’re looking at a California crisis: Birth centers are closing due to regulatory red tape, leaving parents-to-be—especially low-income and minority mothers—with few options for where they can give birth.

We’re also climbing to the tops of California’s iconic palm trees and learning about a scientist’s mission to save them from being eaten alive, talking to the new lead singer of a truly quintessential SoCal band, traveling to a town determined to preserve its stargazing, taking a trip to Channel Islands National Park, and stepping inside an improbable opera house in the desert.
Plus, we’ve got a massive, stunning visual smorgasbord of some of California’s most underrated destinations. Get your bucket list out—you’re going to want to make some additions. And I hope you’re hungry, because we’re also hitting the hottest new restaurant in Hillcrest and shouting out some of our favorite food finds this month around SD. This magazine is packed like a California rush-hour freeway.
We had fun putting this together for you, and we hope you enjoy exploring our golden state with us. We’re lucky to call this place home.
San Diego, CA
San Diego guts arts funding to balance budget as California cities make deep spending cuts
San Diego is slashing funding for arts, libraries and recreation centers, as it stares down a $146 million budget deficit that’s forcing unpopular spending cuts.
It’s not alone. Other California cities face similar gaps, including Los Angeles with a $200 deficit, Sacramento with a $66 million shortfall and San Francisco facing a $643 million gap over the next two years.
The cities’ financial woes echo the state’s projected deficit of $3 to $18 billion, as inflation collides with cuts in federal aid. In San Diego, lackluster growth of local sales, property and hotel taxes create an additional squeeze.
“What we’ve been seeing over the last several years after COVID and inflationary pressures, is that it has affected prices across the nation, across the world,” said Rolando Charvel, chief financial officer for San Diego. “Costs are going up faster than our revenue growth”
San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria released a $6.4 billion proposed budget last week, revealing a barebones spending plan that shored up public safety, homelessness and road repair and traffic safety, but slashed other services.
Adriana Heldiz
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CalMatters
“It makes the tough decisions now—including targeted reductions to staffing and support functions—to protect the services San Diegans rely on and keep the city on solid footing,” Gloria said in a statement.
That infuriated arts and culture advocates, who protested that the mayor’s plan would eliminate nearly all arts funding and curtail hours and programs at libraries, parks and recreation centers.
“When we cut the things that make San Diego or any city great, the things that bring us together as a community… I shudder to think what we end up with,” said Patrick Stewart, CEO of the San Diego Library Foundation.
San Diego City Council members were pleased to see strong public safety funding, but aren’t comfortable with dramatic cuts to the arts, council President Joe LaCava said. “People will pull out their pencils and start scouring the mayor’s budget to see if we can tackle that going forward.”
Adriana Heldiz
/
CalMatters
How California cities are falling short
Amid statewide budget woes, San Diego offers a case study in how city spending can fall into the red.
“We’re being hit both on the cost side and the revenue side,” said Alan Gin, an associate professor of economics at the University of San Diego.
Costs are up for everything from car parts for city vehicle fleets to asphalt for street repair, making maintenance and operations pricier, Charvel said. Meanwhile, inflation suppresses consumer spending, tourism and home sales — all key sources of local taxes.
That’s partly due to forces outside local control.
“Federal immigration policy, tariffs and other dimensions of trade policies, are putting cost pressures on deliverers of services in all sectors, and state and local governments are no stranger to that,” said Jeffrey Clemens, an economist with UC San Diego.
A November report by the National League of Cities stated that most cities were bracing for belt-tightening, as they contend with rising costs, infrastructure demands, tariffs and other challenges.
Its survey of local governments found that 55% of cities found it harder to balance their budgets in 2025 than the previous year, compared to just 11% in 2022.
Pandemic aid is expiring as cities confront new budget crunches, said Ben Triffo, a legislative advocate for the League of California Cities.
“I think we’re seeing the slow shift from recovery to restraint,” he said. “Our cities’ revenues are flattening; they’re not keeping pace with the costs.”
In San Diego, property tax growth is expected to slow this year, as the number of home sales drops, Charvel said. The region has a deep housing shortage, and limited inventory with high mortgage rates means fewer homes are selling.
Federal cuts to housing assistance, and inconsistent state funding for homelessness response, have also cost San Diego, LaCava said.
Ongoing inflation, fueled by tariffs and rising gas prices from the war in Iran, is suppressing consumer spending. In San Diego, sales taxes are projected to grow by half the rate they did last year, Charvel said. In 2024, San Diego voters rejected a one cent sales tax by less than one percentage point.
“Consumers are feeling squeamish in the general sense, in particular in the housing market, and that’s creating statewide and national pressures on property tax and sales tax revenues,” Clemens said.
San Diego’s tourism industry is also bracing for a slump; hotel taxes will grow just 1.5 percent this year, down from 6 percent last year, as both group travel and international visitation decline, Charvel said.
“For example, Canadians are boycotting the U.S.,” Gin said. “We’re affected by that in San Diego, because we’re a big tourism destination.”
As revenue stagnates, costs are piling up. The mayor’s office estimates it would cost $118 to $120 million more to run city services at the same level as last year, plus another $26 million for legal mandates, settlements, FEMA accreditation and other fixed expenses. San Diego has a backlog of maintenance for sidewalks and other facilities, and has to meet state mandates to upgrade its stormwater system, Charvel said.
Some critics say San Diego’s spending priorities are misplaced, pointing to bloated middle management and inadequate infrastructure investment. A report released this month by the San Diego Taxpayers Association stated that the city’s workforce has increased about four times faster than its population growth over the last 15 years.
During that period, middle-management positions grew 461%, from 70 to 393, the report stated. San Diego officials pushed back, stating that many of those positions were funded by specific grants, and some had since been reduced.
Other big California cities are also in dire straits. San Francisco’s government spending has far outpaced local tax growth, and the city struggles with federal cuts to food stamps and Medicaid.
Last week San Francisco workers protested the first wave of layoff notices after Mayor Daniel Lurie’s budget office warned departments to prepare to eliminate 500 jobs. The city also plans to cut disability assistance, environmental programs and legal aid.
In February, Los Angeles City Controller Kenneth Mejia wrote that the city is projected to overspend by $200 million, as it contends with last year’s Palisades and Eaton wildfires, “tariff levels unseen since the Great Depression, and aggressive federal immigration enforcement.” In a separate report on the last fiscal year Mejia warned that overspending, rising liability costs and stagnant revenue has led to “crumbling infrastructure and deteriorating services.”
Who bears the brunt of cuts?
As cities try to close their budget gaps, public officials and advocates should think hard about who will fall through the cracks, Clemens said.
“We should be worried that when cuts are being considered, the cuts will be to things that don’t have voices among well-organized stakeholder groups, that are the easiest, from a political perspective, to pull back on,” he said.
San Diego plans to close its budget hole by eliminating 101 jobs, placing employees on furlough for one week per year, and making steep cuts to selected departments.
San Diego’s 37 library branches will have to trim $2.5 million in hours of service, Stewart said, along with programming, books and materials. The city is also ending a matching grant fund that helped libraries drum up private donations. The city council will decide when and where to limit library hours.
The deepest cut was the near elimination of arts funding. The mayor’s budget proposes to zero out an $11.8 million arts and culture grant program, leaving just $2 million in a separate account.
“The mayor is proposing decimating a long-standing, critical source of revenue for what is now nearly 200 organizations across San Diego,” said Jessica Hanson York, executive director of the Mingei Museum and president of the Balboa Park Cultural Partnership, which represents the museums at the city’s historic cultural center.
Many of those provide free events, performances and education programs, she said. In what York called a “double punch,” San Diego imposed controversial parking fees at Balboa Park earlier this year. Since then museum directors have reported a drop in museum visitation, while parking fees are bringing in less money than originally planned.
York questioned whether the $11.8 million savings would provide meaningful relief to the city’s multi-billion dollar budget, but said collateral damage could ripple out to other sectors and dampen spending on entertainment and tourism.
“When you cut quality of life services you absolutely undermine future economic opportunities, revenue, development and investment opportunities,” Stewart said.
At a packed hearing earlier this week, hundreds of residents spoke against gutting the arts program, and the city council plans to hold additional public hearings to refine the city’s spending plan. LaCava hopes to soften the blow of the deepest cuts but acknowledged there will be stark choices.
“Nobody is going to be happy with the budget as it’s going to be adopted in June,” he said. “My job as council president is to make it an open and transparent process. I hope at the end people will feel they had a fair chance to make their case.”
San Diego, CA
San Diego Care Facility Owner Sentenced To House Arrest For Elder Abuse
SAN DIEGO, CA — The former owner of a San Diego residential care facility who pleaded guilty to elder abuse charges related to neglect of the business’ residents was sentenced Tuesday to one year of home detention and two years of probation.
Maria Erolina Delgado, 62, was charged last year by the California Attorney General’s Office for leaving the facility, J & M Happy Guest Home, “severely understaffed,” prosecutors said, resulting in multiple residents suffering from bed sores, dehydration and malnourishment.
The AG’s Office also alleged some residents were left in soiled diapers for days at a time.
The charged conduct occurred in 2020, according to the criminal complaint filed against Delgado last fall.
She pleaded guilty earlier this year to two felony elder abuse counts.
San Diego, CA
PFL returns to San Diego in June with A.J. McKee vs. Salamat Isbulaev
Professional Fighters League is making its return to Southern California, with San Diego the site of a pro mixed martial arts event for the first time in nearly two years.
PFL San Diego Presented by GOVX will take place June 27 at Pechanga Arena, with former Bellator featherweight champion A.J. McKee squaring off against undefeated Salamat Isbulaev in the main event.
Bellator held its final event – Bellator 300 on Oct. 27, 2023, at Pechanga Arena – before being acquired less than four weeks later by PFL. The company returned to San Diego for Bellator Champions Series 4 on Sept. 7, 2024.
“San Diego has one of the strongest fight cultures in the country, and it’s a community that truly understands and appreciates this sport,” PFL CEO John Martin said. “Bringing PFL here and doing it with a card headlined by a Southern California star like A.J. McKee makes this event especially meaningful for us.”
The 31-year-old McKee (24-2), who fights out of Long Beach, continues his pursuit to reclaim his place atop the 145-pound division. Ranked No. 2 in the PFL, McKee is coming off a unanimous-decision victory over Adam Borics at PFL Madrid in March. He has won both his fights since returning to featherweight after a 4-1 stint in the 155-pound lightweight division.
The sixth-ranked Isbulaev (10-0) has quickly scaled the 145-pound rankings. In his PFL debut, the 29-year-old from Kazakhstan recorded a first-round knockout upset of former PFL featherweight champ Jesus Pinedo in February.
“This is the kind of fight that defines a division. A proven champion in A.J. McKee facing an undefeated challenger in Salamat Isbulaev, who’s coming off a statement win over a former champion and brings serious momentum into this matchup,” Martin said.
Tickets for PFL San Diego Presented by GOVX are available through pre-sale Monday at pfl.info/sandiego.
The main card will air live at 7 p.m. on ESPN 2. The prelims, which starts at 4 p.m., will air on the ESPN app. No other bouts have been announced.
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