San Diego, CA
Anders Dreyer leads San Diego to win in 1st MLS game, 2-0 over defending champion LA Galaxy
Anders Dreyer scored two goals and San Diego FC had a successful Major League Soccer debut, beating the defending MLS Cup champion LA Galaxy 2-0 on Sunday.
Dreyer took advantage of a turnover for the first goal in the 52nd minute. Galaxy defender Emiro Garces slipped after taking a pass from goalkeeper Novak Micovic in the box. Lozano pounced on the loose ball and fired a pass to Dreyer, whose left-footed shot beat Micovic.
The forward sealed the match on a breakaway goal in the 92nd minute.
CJ dos Santos made three saves to get the shutout.
San Diego is the 10th club to join MLS since 2017, but only the third to win its first match, joining Los Angeles FC (2018) and St. Louis City (2023).
Miguel Berry had the Galaxy’s best chance, a point-blank shot in the 79th minute that dos Santos turned away.
It was the Galaxy’s first loss at Dignity Health Park since the 2023 season finale. The six-time MLS Cup champs were missing forward Joseph Paintsil (quad) and midfielder Riqui Puig (knee). Puig is not expected back until early summer.
Micovic had four saves for the Galaxy.
San Diego plays its first home game on Saturday against St. Louis, but MLS commissioner Don Garber was happy to see a good amount of fans make the drive north. San Diego supporters filled four sections in the upper deck.
“There are many things that have taken a long time to achieve. Getting San Diego into the league has been a long-term goal and objective,” Garber said before the game. “Our league has to constantly remind ourselves we are new, better to get it right than done fast. And ensure when it does happen that you are clicking on all cylinders.”
San Diego, CA
Talking current state of homelessness in San Diego following State of the City
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) – The issue and topic of homelessness and how to address it have been going on for years. It’s also been a talking point of Mayor Todd Gloria’s State of the City for years as well.
“This issue is urgent. It is complex, and it demands action. “And the results of our efforts are becoming clearer,” Gloria said on Thursday. “You can see it, and the data confirms it. Together we are expanding shelter, strengthening outreach, creating real pathways off the streets, and we’ve done it by insisting on a simple truth: a sidewalk is not a home.”
While some have gotten off the streets, many have set up their encampments along the highways of Downtown San Diego.
Gloria highlighted the pilot partnership that started last July with the State and City to clear homeless encampments off the highway.
“Since then, we’ve been able to remove over 320 encampments, which has resulted in over 200 tons of waste removed, and then with that, though we do offer services before, during, and even after if they want them,” Franklin Coopersmith of the City of San Diego’s Environmental Services Department said. “Of which, we’ve gotten 95 people into a city shelter or service option, and of those, we’ve actually gotten 8 people into a permanent housing option.”
Gloria said he’d like to expand the program moving forward.
“I want to do more because this agreement with CalTrans has proven so successful. I am urging state leaders to expand it and allow city crews to cover more areas next to freeways where we know tent encampments exist,” Gloria said
ABC 10News spoke with some local non-profits about how they view the homelessness crisis at the moment.
“I think there’s a lot of activity. I think there’s a desire on the City’s behalf to make progress around homelessness,” Drew Moser, Executive Director of Lucky Duck Foundation, said.
“That the crisis still remains, right? The fact remains that we have many unsheltered individuals on any given night on the streets,” Deacon Jim Vargas, President & CEO of Father Joe’s Villages, said.
Some had some questions about the progress.
“I think the mayor said that they had increased shelter capacity. Our question would be, where did that happen?”
The City’s Homelessness Strategies and Solutions Department told ABC 10News it added two shelters in 2025 – one that has 43 beds (Safe Shelter for Transition-Age Youth (Safe STAY)) and another with 50 beds at the moment but can be increased to a capacity of 210 (Rachel’s Promise Shelter).
It also opened the H Barracks Safe Parking lot, and the Safe Sleeping site O Lot expansion of 235 more tents in late 2024 bled into early 2025.
“Those are, I mean, individual tents without heating or air conditioning or some of the many other benefits that exist at a bridge shelter or transitional housing,” Moser said.
“We also recognize that there are more seniors who are falling onto the streets, more behavioral health issues that we’re seeing on the mental health side and the detox side,” Vargas said.
Gloria did acknowledge the need for mental health and detox resources in his State of the City.
“We need more treatment capacity, more psychiatric care beds, more detox, and long-term recovery options. We need faster pathways from the street and into care,” Gloria said.
San Diego, CA
Michael Smolens: GOP campaign committee makes audacious claims for Rep. Issa
Thanks to Rep. Darrell Issa, violent crime is plummeting nationwide and California is receiving more than $233 million in rural health care funding.
At least that’s the view of the National Republican Congressional Campaign Committee. The NRCC in recent weeks has put out a series of statements seemingly crediting the San Diego-area Republican with almost single-handedly forging such progress.
The reality is a bit different.
There’s no question Issa has supported anti-crime policies for the more than two decades he’s been in Congress, particularly during the two Trump administrations, and backed the recent plan for a $50 billion outlay for rural health services nationwide.
So did hundreds of other members of Congress, who similarly had no outsized role in these outcomes.
The rural health care release from the NRCC came just days before Issa, a Trump loyalist, voted against extending the Affordable Care Act tax credits, which passed the House despite opposition from GOP leadership and the president.
Odds are that during the campaign Issa’s vote will far overshadow his support for boosting rural health care — if his Democratic opponent has anything to say about it.
Perhaps more than anything, the NRCC actions signal the GOP is four-square behind Issa’s re-election in the 48th Congressional District, which had been a deeply red enclave that now leans Democratic thanks to the redistricting mania that swept through several states.
That’s not a surprise, given Issa’s San Diego-based district is considered a top battleground for partisan control of the House, where Republicans hold a slim majority.
Issa wasn’t committed to the new district at the outset. There was speculation he might jump to a nearby Republican district and, in a move that made national headlines, Issa openly considered running for a district in Texas. After a meeting with Trump, he decided to stay put.
Meanwhile, the NRCC has also sent out missives attempting to skewer the leading Democrats in the race — former Issa congressional opponent Ammar Campa-Najjar and San Diego City Councilmember Marni von Wilpert.
Big GOP money has yet to be spent, but that wouldn’t happen until months from now, with Issa expected to advance easily out of the June primary to the November election.
The NRCC moves would seem to put to rest any notion that Issa will drop out of the race before the election, something Campa-Najjar has continued to predict would happen as recently as a couple of weeks ago during a CNN interview.
The NRCC suggests Issa took a leading role in combating crime, but had some help. The big reductions last year coincided with Trump’s return to the White House.
“Thanks to Congressman Darrell Issa, violent crime is plummeting nationwide as Republican leadership restores law and order,” the committee said. “The country is on track for the largest single-year drop in murders ever recorded, with killings down nearly 20 percent from last year.”
The statement notes other violent crimes are dropping as well, “marking a clear break from years of Democrats’ soft-on-crime failures.”
The statistics are backed up with a link to an analysis by the Axios news organization, which nevertheless has a different perspective.
“The decline in killings is part of a broader decrease in violent crime following the COVID-era spike. Mass killings in the U.S. also fell in 2025, reaching their lowest level since 2006,” according to Axios.
“…President Trump has prioritized cracking down on violent crime in his second term, though there is no clear evidence linking his policies to the decline. Crime rates have been declining since 2021, according to data,” Axios added.
Except for the COVID era, crime in San Diego also has been on a downward trend for many years, making it one of the safest big cities in America. Under the NRCC logic, big credit would go to von Wilpert, who has been on the council for a handful of years and serves as chair of its public safety committee.
Interestingly, New York, Chicago, Memphis and Los Angeles County — all Democratic — experienced big double-digit reductions in murders compared with 2024, according to Axios. By comparison, predominantly Republican Johnston County, N.C., and Gilbert, Ariz., reported huge increases in the murder rate.
Not surprisingly, the NRCC release doesn’t mention that Trump’s Department of Justice slashed an estimated $500 million in federal funding for programs to help local and state justice initiatives, including policing, crime prevention, victim services and juvenile justice.
The increased health care funding will certainly be welcome in rural areas, many of which have distant and struggling medical services. That’s good regardless of politics, though much of rural America is Republican territory. Nevertheless, it might not benefit Issa as much as it would have in his current district.
The new 48th District expands north and west, losing much of its backcountry population in East County and adding Escondido, San Marcos and Vista. It also now includes heavily-Democratic Palm Springs in Riverside County.
“Congressman Darrell Issa continues to show that he is laser-focused on what matters to California families. Delivering quality, accessible healthcare is a critical win for California, and voters won’t forget it,” NRCC spokesman Christian Martinez says in the release.
Many may not forget his vote against the extension of ACA tax credits either.
“Once again, Rep. Darrell Issa has betrayed his constituents to protect Donald Trump and his party leadership, even as health care costs spiral out of control,” von Wilpert said in a statement.
Along with Medicaid cuts supported by Issa, von Wilpert cited congressional statistics projecting more than 32,000 of Issa’s constituents will lose health insurance. She said Issa has voted 17 times to repeal the Affordable Care Act.
Campa-Najjar said in a statement that Issa failed “to protect the ACA tax credits that working families rely on to afford their health care.”
Issa and other Republicans have said the ACA needs reforms to drive down costs if it is to remain viable and suggested the program is riddled with fraud. Among other things, Issa has pursued legislation to lower prescription drug costs.
Republican House leaders unsuccessfully sought to avoid the latest ACA vote, knowing it would displease Trump and potentially hurt vulnerable Republicans like Issa. Seventeen other Republicans joined Democrats in voting to extend the tax credits. The bill is pending in the Senate.
Back in 2018, Issa represented a once-red district in North County that had eventually turned purple and a defeat seemed in the cards. He chose not to run after his loyalty to Trump and a pivotal vote he cast against the increasingly popular ACA supercharged Democrats in the district.
It seems at least some of that history is repeating itself.
San Diego, CA
Local aerospace expert talks NASA astronaut splash down off San Diego coast
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) – After spending five months in space, four astronauts on the latest NASA mission splashed down safely in the water off San Diego.
But the Earth’s a big place with a whole lot of water, so how was it picked to land here?
“They look at the re-entry and the splashdown along a narrow, it’s a very time-dependent sort of corridor of the ground track,” Aaron Rosengren of UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering said.
Rosengren is an expert in the aerospace field. ABC 10News spoke with him about the successful splashdown off the coast of San Diego.
“The space ecosystem in Southern California is burgeoning right now. So, you know, that does play some role, probably with ground stations, coordinations, and the like,” Rosengren said. “But really, it was just a favorable season condition. The logistics worked out, and it was the best timing window that happened to line up. And this is the corridor that we re-entered in to.”
ABC 10News also reached out to NASA following the splashdown and asked why the water off the San Diego coast was designated the reentry point.
“After their long-duration mission completed, Crew-11 was the second NASA commercial crew mission to splash down in the Pacific Ocean. NASA and SpaceX worked together to certify and ensure readiness for Dragon recovery operations on the West Coast. Since 2019, Dragon recoveries primarily occurred off the Florida coast. SpaceX transitioned recovery operations to the West Coast to allow the spacecraft to complete deorbit before safely jettisoning the trunk over the Pacific Ocean,” Joseph Zakrzewski, Public Affairs Specialist with NASA Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, said.
“Crew splashdown locations are near Los Angeles, Oceanside, and San Diego. The recovery vessel is stationed in Long Beach, California, to support these operations. To establish this capability and improve public safety, NASA and SpaceX spent months setting up new sites, obtaining regulatory approvals, performing engine assessments, implementing software changes, conducting tabletop exercises, and updating flight rules.”
Rosengren also broke down the relationship between NASA and SpaceX when it comes to the coordination of the reentry.
“NASA is the one that coordinates this, SpaceX is the one that executes it,” Rosengren said. “So, they execute the vehicle, the re-entry, the recovery operations, and I think NASA has flight rules and oversight for that comes into play.”
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