San Diego, CA
City ripped for handling of trash fee approval process, fee details
Re “City makes homeowners jump through hoops to oppose new trash fee” (April 21): We the public have been told to expect that we can object to the trash fee proposal via a postcard which we may sign and send to City Hall. A funny thing happened when there was no postcard but instead a multi-page document having the last page as the document to sign and send. It is as bad as telling us that the trash fee would be $23-$29 when it became twice that much. Turn to this page and see what is meant by “bait and switch.”
— Harvey Goldstein, Carmel Valley
I own a home in the city of San Diego. It is not my permanent residence. I did not receive a ballot on the recent vote for changing the rules for trash pickup. But the city of San Diego was able to “find” my address and send me a notice of how much my trash services (in San Diego) would be. Yet the city could not find my permanent address to send me a ballot? Isn’t that “taxation without representation”? How can that be legal?
And the trash fee is mandatory? I live in the county where I can choose a trash provider or I can choose not to have trash service. The city needs to get out of the trash business, like many other cities, and let people pick which company they want. Can the city legally force people to pay for trash service?
— Barbara McCoy, La Mesa
Our one-building, four-unit condominium shares black/blue/green refuse bins, with trash pick-up provided by the city of San Diego. Under the proposed plan to gather new revenue, it appears each of the four units will be delivered one black bin, one blue bin and one green bin — even though we absolutely do not want or need 16 bins!
Also, our current bins are in excellent condition and do not need replacement. I hope the city identifies a way to avoid the terrible waste of replacing good bins, as well as not delivering an excess of unwanted/unneeded bins to multi-unit properties that can effectively share receptacles.
The city needs to ensure that multi-unit properties have the ability to opt out of having at least one of each bin.
— Debbie Malcarne, Pacific Beach
San Diego, CA
Marne Royce Hadden – San Diego Union-Tribune
Marne Royce Hadden
OBITUARY
Marne Royce Hadden died in hospice on December 8, 2025 after a brave battle with cancer. She was predeceased by her parents and brother, Alex, and is survived by four siblings.
She was born on November 4, 1951 at Huntington Memorial in Pasadena, California, the fourth child of Wesley and Dorothy Hadden. Until she was seven, Marne lived with her family at the Huntington Hotel in Pasadena where her maternal grandfather, Stephen W. Royce, was the owner and managing director, and her father, the assistant sales manager. In the summer of 1958, the Hadden family moved to Rancho Santa Fe to run the Royce family’s recently acquired Inn at Rancho Santa Fe.
The Ranch in the early ’60s – a tranquil village with a market, library, hardware store, and gift shops – was magical for most children, but even more so for Marne who had the run of the Inn’s beautiful grounds, attended the local school, kept chickens and baby quail as pets, and learned to ride. She soon became an accomplished equestrienne competing in horse shows around the state with her trusty steed, Rocky Neil, and collecting scores of blue ribbons across multiple events from western bareback to stock horse equitation. At The Bishop’s School in La Jolla, Marne was a popular student athlete and captain of the Royal Purples in her senior year. She graduated with the class of 1969 and went on to Pine Manor Junior College in Brookline, Massachusetts, where she made the honor list in the winter term of her freshman year.
Tragically, Marne suffered a scuba diving accident in the late summer of 1970 that left her disabled for the rest of her life. Diminished but ever resilient and surrounded, supported, and cared for by family and friends, Marne persevered in her inimitable style. She found childlike joy in everything she did from baking cookies, coloring, playing dominoes to weekly visits to the San Diego Zoo and Wild Animal Park with Suzanne Keil, her dear friend and constant companion. Marne was also lovingly cared for by her caregiver, Linda Tate the last 10 years of her life.
For years, Marne proudly led her pygmy goats, Friday and Harbor, in the 4th of July parade and rode her large tricycle to the Helen Woodward Animal Center where she volunteered and participated in the handicapped riding program, often stopping by the Chino Farm on her way home for the watermelons she loved and the corn they cooked for her.
In recent years, Marne loved visits to the beach and programs at the Rancho Santa Fe Senior Center, across the street from the lovely home she was raised and lived in for nearly 70 years.
In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations to the Hellen Woodward Animal Center. A private memorial service will be held at a later time.
San Diego, CA
Christmas Day services, community events scheduled across San Diego County
Despite stormy weather, San Diego County residents will still have plenty of opportunities to celebrate Christmas in festive and spiritual ways.
From worship services to community meals and holiday celebrations, organizations across the region are opening their doors.
Scheduled Christmas Day religious services include:
— Church of the Resurrection, 1445 Conway Drive, Escondido: Mass at 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. in English, and at noon in Spanish;
— St. Thomas More Catholic Church, 1450 S. Melrose Drive, Oceanside: Mass at 9:30 a.m.;
— St. Michael’s by-the-Sea Episcopal Church, 2775 Carlsbad Blvd., Carlsbad: Mass beginning at 9:30 a.m.;
— St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church, 890 Balour Drive, Encinitas: Christmas worship service at 9:30 a.m.; and
— St. Peter’s Episcopal Church, 334 14th St., Del Mar: Christmas service at 10 a.m.
Elsewhere in San Diego County:
— Beginning at 8 a.m., the eighth annual Shane Harris Community Christmas Day breakfast and gift giveaway will be held at Columbus Hall, 4425 Home Ave. Held to benefit for foster families, unsheltered youth and struggling families, the event will include two wrapped gifts, free breakfast for families and 15 tons of snow; and
— At 11 a.m., Serving Seniors will host a holiday dinner featuring entertainment, for older adults at the Gary and Mary West Senior Wellness Center. John Conroy, a Serving Seniors client who was formerly homeless, will play piano, and others will also receive holiday gift bags with practical items.
In a statement, Harris said the holiday breakfast event exists because “Christmas morning can be incredibly lonely for families facing hardship.”
“This is about creating a home, a table, and a moment of joy for families who need it most,” he said. “Seeing this grow into a citywide tradition has been incredibly humbling.”
Meanwhile, administrative offices and some city of San Diego facilities will see limited closures on Christmas Eve, with most facilities closed on Christmas Day. All city administrative offices will be closed Thursday.
Police and Fire-Rescue services will operate on normal schedules. County animal shelters, family resource centers, health clinics, libraries and public offices will be closed Thursday, but law enforcement and emergency animal control services will continue operating.
County campgrounds and parks will remain open on the holiday. However, the following community facilities will be closed: Adams Park Pool; community centers in Fallbrook, Lakeside, Spring Valley and teen community centers; the 4S Ranch Recreation Office; Spring Valley Gymnasium; and Valley Center Community Hall.
On Christmas Day, the Metropolitan Transit System will offer free rides, as part of a promotion.
“Every fare-paying adult passenger can bring one guest along at no additional cost,” MTS officials said in a statement.
According to MTS, on Thursday:
— All trolley lines will operate every 30 minutes, while most bus routes will operate on a Sunday schedule;
— No service will be available on Rapid Express Routes 280 or 290, and Rural Routes 888, 891, 892 and 894;
— MTS Access subscription passengers needing service must call ahead of time to arrange their transportation; and
— Holiday travelers may use direct connections to San Diego International Airport, via Route 992 adjacent to Santa Fe Depot or the San Diego Airport Flyer from the Old Town Transit Center.
San Diego, CA
Sex trafficking sting in San Diego County leads to 10 arrests, 19 victims found
An anti-sex trafficking operation carried out by law enforcement agencies in San Diego, Chula Vista and National City earlier this month resulted in 10 arrests and the recovery of 19 alleged trafficking victims, it was announced Tuesday.
Operation Home for the Holidays was conducted over a three-day period and involved undercover officers posing as sex buyers in order to encounter potential traffickers and trafficking victims.
Those arrested during the operation include four men charged with pimping, pandering and violating a protective order, who face anywhere between six and 20 years in prison if convicted, according to the San Diego County District Attorney’s Office. Six others were issued misdemeanor citations for allegedly attempting to purchase sex.
The 19 recovered individuals were offered support services, which the DA’s Office said will “help them escape and heal from exploitation and human trafficking.”
Operation Home for the Holidays is an annual initiative conducted by the multi-agency San Diego Human Trafficking Task Force, which includes local, state and federal law enforcement agencies.
California Attorney General Rob Bonta said in a statement that the operation “is a key part of our efforts to keep our communities safe for the holidays and all year round.”
Similar operations are conducted throughout the year in San Diego County, including an annual operation held during Comic-Con weekend that resulted in 13 arrests and 10 victims recovered this year, and an operation conducted last month in National City and southern San Diego that led to the rescues of two minors.
“The ugly truth is that sex trafficking remains a lucrative criminal industry fueled by demand that generating over $810 million a year in San Diego County,” San Diego County District Attorney Summer Stephan said.
“I’m proud of our work with the San Diego Regional Human Trafficking Task Force, my office’s Sex Crimes and Human Trafficking Division and all our partners that work around the clock to recover victims as young as 12. Together they hold human traffickers and criminal buyers accountable for their crimes. The ongoing efforts of the task force demonstrate that law enforcement will not tolerate this modern-day slavery of vulnerable victims who are bought and sold like a slice of pizza.”
Officials asked that anyone who is or knows someone being coerced or forced to engage in sexual activity or labor call the National Human Trafficking Hotline at 1-888-373-7888 to access help.
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