San Diego, CA
If you weren’t selected for the CDC’s Tijuana River sewage survey, here’s another one you can take
Late last week, local and federal public health officials interviewed households near the Tijuana River Valley about how the crossborder sewage crisis may be impacting their health. For those who did not receive a visit, there’s a new opportunity to share feedback.
On Monday, the federal Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR), in collaboration with San Diego County, launched an Assessment of Chemical Exposure, or ACE, an online survey aiming to identify how many people have been exposed to contaminants related to untreated wastewater and toxic chemicals in the Tijuana River Valley, symptoms they may be experiencing and what immediate support they may need.
“This community deserves better,” Ankita Kadakia, county interim public health officer, said in a statement. “By bringing in this federal agency to help us conduct an ACE survey, individuals who live or work near the water have a chance to voice their concerns, their experiences, and the impacts to their physical and mental health.”
According to the federal agency’s website, an ACE can include interviewing people about their exposure and medical history, symptoms experienced, the health services they’ve received, and even if their pets’ health has been affected. Hospital staff and incident responders are also contacted to learn more details about who has been exposed and what’s been done to protect people.
The information collected can help local health departments identify a group of exposed people that could be followed for long-term effects, find ways to prevent further exposure, decide whether to modify emergency response procedures or take other measures to protect the public.
The ACE in South County follows the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Community Assessment for Public Health Emergency Response (CASPER), which officials conducted in person from Oct. 17-19. County officials said there are noticeable differences between the two surveys, however.
With the CASPER, surveyors visited 210 randomly selected households closest to the Tijuana River Valley to document how sewage pollution may be affecting their health. ACE is meant to capture more individuals who live, work or frequent beaches in Imperial Beach and Coronado and around the Tijuana River Valley, than the household survey. County officials said some crossover is possible.
Officials said they want to hear from people who have done anything like surfing, shopping, fishing or walking near those areas in the last month.
Tom Csanadi, an Imperial Beach resident and retired pediatrician who lives on the city’s beach, said he has a lot to say about how the crossborder sewage crisis has impacted his household. But he was not part of the 210 surveyed last week. So, he plans to take the ACE survey.
“As a resident living very close to the water, close to where a great volume of raw human sewage pours onto our shores and soil, it’s impossible to believe that there are no harmful effects to people who live and visit this area,” he said. “And so, in situations like this, you have to cast a wide broad net.”
Residents have reported experiencing symptoms such as chronic coughs, watery eyes, headaches, nausea and diarrhea after being regularly exposed to strong odors emanating from the Tijuana River or after heavy rains that bring more polluted flows across the U.S.-Mexico border and sometimes spill onto local roads. Local university researchers have also discovered that bacteria from raw sewage in the waters of Imperial Beach and the river have become airborne.
The sewage crisis is primarily caused by outdated and underfunded treatment infrastructure that has been unable to clean the volume of wastewater produced by Tijuana’s growing population. In the last year, more than 30 billion gallons of polluted flow and trash have made their way into South County via the river and Pacific Ocean.
Over the past months, the local public health department has been working with the state and CDC to dig deeper into potential health impacts of the sewage crisis that have not shown up in reportable county health data. Besides securing the CASPER with the CDC, the county had also inquired with the ATSDR to conduct an ACE.
ACE will be open through Nov. 22. To take the survey, available in English and Spanish, visit redcap.link/tjrv2024.
San Diego, CA
Elite California city set for mass illegal street vendor expansion as judge issues stunning verdict
San Diego seems to have no solution to its illegal street vendor problem and it’s only getting worse in many areas including the popular Balboa Park and Gaslamp Quarter.
Local business leaders are frustrated following the January 2026 California appeals court ruling, which forced the city officials to entirely halt the crackdown on street vendors.
“It’s a disaster,” Denny Knox, executive director of the Ocean Beach Main Street Association, told the San Diego Union Tribune last week.
An increasing number of street vendors are exploiting the court’s ruling and many don’t even bother to get a permit.
Executive Director of Gaslamp Quarter Association, Michael Trimble, said that street vendors block the sidewalks, making it difficult for the businesses in the area to function.
“The lack of action has also led to an escalation of activity, including new vendors setting up tents and selling goods without permits, health approvals or accountability,” said Trimble, the Union-Tribune reports.
Organized groups of hot dog vendors have returned to the Gaslamp Quarter—bringing associated hazards like open fires, blocked walkways, and the dumping of grease into storm drains.
“It’s so much of a slap in the face to merchants that have done things the legal way, the right way,” said Ruth-Ann Thorn, owner of Native Star boutique and Exclusive Collections Gallery in the Gaslamp Quarter, reports inewsource.
Officers can no longer impound vending carts and law enforcement in Ballpark District is restricted, SDPD’s Ashley Nicholes said in a statement, according to the Union-Tribune.
“Recent court rulings involving the city’s street vending ordinance have limited what police officers can do to enforce street vending laws,” Nicholes said.
San Diego’s tug-of-war with street vendors started in 2018 when the state law decriminalized aspects of street vending. The task to draft a vendor law fell into the laps of then-Mayor Kevin Faulconer in 2019, then passed on to Mayor Todd Gloria in 2021 and then Councilmember Jennifer Campbell.
The law, approved by the City Council in May 2022, banned vendors in Balboa Park, Little Italy, Ocean Beach and some beach areas during summer months. But, the merchants kept complaining about the lack of law enforcement and that led to the revision of the law in 2024.
The revised law made it easier for officials to impound vendors’ carts, limited free-speech protections, which didn’t include yoga classes on the beach and selling food.
After an immediate backlash, a federal appeals court ruling in June 2025 said the city’s ban on beach yoga classes is unconstitutional as they are protected under the First Amendment.
A California appeals court in the case of Imhotep Mustaqeem earlier this year ruled that San Diego’s revised 2024 street vendor law violated state law by establishing “overly restrictive” geographic no-vendor zones and restricted operating hours.
Imhotep Mustaqeem, a licensed vendor who had sold snacks outside Petco Park since 2009, sued the city after police impounded his cart under San Diego’s revised 2024 ordinance. While a lower court initially ruled against him, the Fourth District Court of Appeal ultimately vindicated Mustaqeem and quashed the 2024 street vendor law.
San Diego, CA
San Diego and a yoga instructor go the mat over a ban on public classes
A California yoga instructor known as “Namasteve” is leveling up his warrior pose as he battles San Diego’s efforts to end his popular beachfront classes.
Steven Hubbard recently filed his third lawsuit over a 2024 city ordinance that prohibits teaching yoga to four or more people at local beaches and parks.
Hubbard, who’s been teaching yoga by the Pacific Ocean shoreline for 17 years, contends the local law violates his right to free speech because he doesn’t charge his students and instead accepts voluntary donations.
“It does set a dangerous precedent for government to be passing bans on specific types of speech that, for whatever reason, it doesn’t like,” Hubbard’s lawyer, Bryan Pease, told The Independent. “We don’t know why they decided yoga is something they want to target. They’ve never explained it, but it is concerning from a First Amendment perspective.”
Neither the San Diego mayor’s office nor the city attorney’s office replied to inquiries from The Independent.

The yoga ban is buried in a subsection of the San Diego Municipal Code that defines the “services” that are regulated at beaches and parks.
“Examples include massage, yoga, dog training, fitness classes, equipment rental, and staging for picnics, bonfires or other activities,” it says, marking the only time yoga is mentioned.
At the time the ordinance was introduced, Pease said, it was “put on the city council agenda as a sidewalk vending ordinance.”
“There was no public notice that they would be targeting the free and donation-based teaching of yoga in parks and beaches,” the lawyer said. “ I don’t even know that the city council members themselves knew what they were voting on.”
Videos posted on Hubbard’s “Namasteve Yoga” page on YouTube show scores of students following his instructions as they face the water in the Southern California sunshine.
San Diego park rangers issued Hubbard a total of 10 citations under the 2024 law, Pease said.
Some were for leading classes from his backyard while livestreaming on YouTube as students apparently watched on their devices by the beach, Pease said.
After Hubbard first challenged the 2024 ordinance in federal court, the judge overseeing the case denied a motion to block its enforcement, saying the First Amendment didn’t protect the teaching of yoga.
But that decision was reversed last year by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, which ruled that Hubbard and fellow yoga teacher Amy Baack were “likely to succeed” in challenging the legality of San Diego’s public yoga ban.

“Teaching yoga is protected speech. The City’s prohibition on teaching yoga in shoreline parks is content-based and fails strict scrutiny,” according to the unanimous decision written by U.S. Circuit Judge Holly Thomas.
Hubbard has also filed two lawsuits in state court, with the most recent on June 22. It was first reported by the Times of San Diego.
It seeks unspecified damages for three tickets he received in May 2025, all of which charged him with giving a lecture without a permit.
The accusation came despite a ruling in the federal case that said requiring a permit to give a lecture “substantially overburdens” the right to free speech, according to Hubbard’s lawsuit.
All the citations issued against Hubbard were dismissed in April when the city attorney’s office didn’t appear in court to prosecute, Pease said.
Meanwhile, city lawyers have issued a series of subpoenas that seek “detailed GPS tracking information, all social media posts from all time and complete financial records for all financial transactions” involving Hubbard and Baack, Pease said.
Pease characterized the move as “pure harassment,” saying it seemed “calculated to have a chilling effect on people’s participation if they think their personal information is going to be obtained through these channels.”
“All that the city attorney has said to me about it is that it’s to prove that this is commercial activity, and they’re going to hire a financial expert to go through all these records,” he said.
A hearing on a motion to quash the subpoenas is scheduled for July 17 in state court, and pretrial discovery in the federal case is pending, with a deadline of August 28.
San Diego, CA
San Diego County Gas Prices Still Dropping
SAN DIEGO (CNS) — The average price of a gallon of self-serve regular gasoline in San Diego County dropped for the 44th time in 45 days today, falling eight-tenths of a cent to $5.42, its lowest amount since March 12. The average price has fallen 74.9 cents over the past 45 days, including eight-tenths of a cent Saturday, according to figures from the AAA and Oil Price Information Service. It is 9.8 cents less than one week ago and 53.2 cents less than one month ago, but 80 cents more than one year ago. The national average price dropped for the 43rd time in 45 days, falling six-tenths of a cent to $3.804, its lowest amount since March 17.
It has decreased 76 cents over the past 45 days, including 1.3 cents Saturday. The national average price is 6.3 cents less than one week ago and 41.6 cents less than one month ago, but 65.6 cents more than one year ago. “Crude oil prices have fallen to their lowest levels in months, dropping to the $60 a barrel range,” the AAA said Thursday. “Overall, gas prices remain the highest they’ve been in 4 years, but the downward trend since late May is welcome news during the busy summer driving season.”
Copyright 2026, City News Service, Inc.
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