San Diego, CA
Coast Guard Leaders in Sector San Diego Sidelined Amid Claims of Toxic Work Environment
The Coast Guard temporarily relieved the commander and top senior enlisted leader at Coast Guard Sector San Diego as it investigates allegations of a toxic work environment in the unit.
The service announced Friday that Capt. James Spitler and Command Master Chief Michael Dioquino have been temporarily reassigned for “loss of confidence” in their leadership.
Lt. SondraKay Kneen, the district’s public affairs officer, said Monday the service had received reports of unfair treatment by Spitler from personnel at the unit and of “actions against staff” that were “unfair and inappropriate” and “interfered with work performance or created an unwelcome work environment.”
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Dioquino is not being investigated, but he was relieved due to loss of confidence in his ability to fulfill his responsibilities as the command’s senior enlisted leader, she said.
According to Kneen, if the reports are substantiated, the command could request a permanent relief for cause from the Coast Guard Personnel Service Center, which has final say in the matter.
The reliefs are the fifth and sixth of high-profile Coast Guard leaders since April. In June, Cmdr. David Ruhlig, Coast Guard Station New York’s commanding officer, was relieved for “loss of confidence” after leading the unit for three years.
In April, Navy Capt. Daniel Mode, chaplain of the Coast Guard, was relieved for failing to take action when he became aware of sexual misconduct by another chaplain that had taken place before the other chaplain joined the Navy and served in the Coast Guard.
In May, Master Chief Petty Officer of the Coast Guard Reserve Timothy Beard was relieved for inappropriate conduct.
And in late May, Navy Cmdr. Cristiano DeSousa, a Presbyterian chaplain, was relieved as chaplain of the 7th District for what a Coast Guard official described as “poor judgment and performance constituting a breach of trust with the workforce.”
“The Coast Guard cannot accomplish our missions without the respect and trust of each member,” said District 11 Commander Rear Adm. Joseph Buzzella in a statement Friday. “A safe and professional environment for each member is crucial to the success of our service, and we will not tolerate behavior that goes against our core values of honor, respect and devotion to duty.”
Spitler is a 1997 graduate of the Coast Guard Academy who served as an operations officer aboard a seagoing buoy tender before attending Navy Flight School and becoming an HU-25 Falcon pilot. He has served in subsequent roles of responsibility, including command of Air Station Houston, Texas, and chief of the domestic operations division at U.S. Northern Command.
He assumed command of Sector San Diego in 2022.
Dioquino enlisted in the Coast Guard in 1995, becoming a machinery technician and serving on multiple cutters and at various duty stations while advancing through the ranks. He served as a recruiter in Tacoma, Washington, was the recruiter-in-charge in San Francisco, and later worked as a regional supervisor at Coast Guard Recruiting Command in Washington, D.C.
Both men have temporarily been assigned to a program office at Coast Guard Headquarters pending the outcome of their cases, according to Kneen.
Coast Guard Sector San Diego spans more than 165,000 square miles, including 120 miles of the Pacific coast, the maritime border between California and Mexico, and 750 miles of the Colorado River.
The unit also is responsible for Coast Guard oversight of the Port of San Diego.
Kneen said the unit remains fully operational and the leadership changes will have no impact on its abilities to serve the public. Capt. Patrick Dill, chief of incident management for District 11, has temporarily assumed command of Sector San Diego, she added.
Investment Payoff: Coast Guard Meets Recruiting Goals for First Time in 6 Years
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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.
San Diego, CA
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