Campfire’s octopus, chorizo, and celery-root entrée.
Gage Forster
>>
Good Morning, I’m Lawrence K. Jackson….it’s TUESDAY, JANUARY 13TH
>>>> WHY PEOPLE LIVING IN THEIR VEHICLES ARE SUING THE CITY More on that next. But first… the headlines…#######
A COALITION OF MAYORS AND COMMUNITY LEADERS FROM ACROSS THE COUNTY ARE DEMANDING THE REPEAL OF NEW FEES TO PARK IN BALBOA PARK.
SHANE HARRIS DESCRIBES HIMSELF AS SAN DIEGO’S PUBLIC ADVOCATE.
HE SAYS SAN DIEGO MAYOR TODD GLORIA AND THE SAN DIEGO CITY COUNCIL ARE PASSING THEIR FAILURES WITH THE CITY’S BUDGET… ON TO THE PUBLIC.
PARKINGREPEAL 2A :20
“Paid parking didn’t happen because residents demanded it. It happened because City Hall created a massive budget deficit, and instead of owning that failure, they decided to pass the bill onto the families, seniors, students, workers and visitors.”
GLORIA ISSUED A STATEMENT SAYING, IN PART, REPEALING THE PARKING FEES WOULD DISMANTLE THE CITY’S PROGRESS CREATING A DIRECT FUNDING STREAM FOR PARK OPERATIONS AND IMPROVEMENTS.
HARRIS SAYS IF IT’S NOT REPEALED, HE MAY BRING FORTH A VOTER REFERENDUM TO FORCE ITS REPEAL.
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IN OTHER NEWS INVOLVING THE CITY OF SAN DIEGO AND ITS MAYOR… THE CITY’S SAFE PARKING LOCATION IN BAY PARK IS GETTING A BIT OF AN UPDATE.
YESTERDAY MORNING, MAYOR TODD GLORIA AND OTHERS HELD A RIBBON-CUTTING FOR A NEW COMMUNITY SPACE AT THE ROSE CANYON SAFE PARKING SITE.
IT FEATURES NEW APPLIANCES, A LIBRARY FOR CHILDREN AND A MEETING SPACE.
JEWISH FAMILY SERVICE OPERATES THE SITE, WHICH OPENED IN 2023.
MAYOR GLORIA SAYS IT’S A SUCCESS STORY FOR HIS APPROACH TO TEMPORARY HOUSING.
SOT 0:16
“People understand that the folks here at this project are getting their lives together and going on to somewhere better. And I always like to use this as an example for other shelter suggestions that we have around the city to help people understand that I get the concern. But I promise you this is going to work well.”
THE ROSE CANYON SAFE PARKING SITE IS OPEN 24-HOURS.
BUT THERE IS AN ENROLLMENT PROCESS.
DETAILS ARE AVAILABLE AT THE CITY’S WEBSITE.
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THOUSANDS PEACEFULLY GATHERED OVER THE WEEKEND ACROSS SAN DIEGO COUNTY TO PROTEST ICE
PROTESTERS WERE SPEAKING OUT AFTER AN ICE OFFICER FATALLY SHOT A MINNEAPOLIS WOMAN LAST WEEK
THE TWO LARGEST PROTESTS IN THE COUNTY WERE ON SATURDAY IN ENCINITAS AND ESCONDIDO.
THERE WERE ABOUT ONE THOUSAND PEOPLE AT THE ENCINITAS PROTEST, AND ROUGHLY 500 AT THE ESCONDIDO PROTEST
IN RESPONSE TO THE PROTESTS, DISTRICT 3 SUPERVISOR, TERRA LAWSON-REMER SAID QUOTE PEACEFUL PROTEST IS HOW COMMUNITIES HAVE ALWAYS FORCED CHANGE AND DEFENDED DEMOCRACY
From KPBS, you’re listening to San Diego News Now.Stay with me for more of the local news you need.
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THE CITY OF SAN DIEGO HAS BEEN ISSUING CITATIONS TO PEOPLE LIVING IN CARS AND RVS… IN AN EFFORT TO MOVE THEM TO ONE OF THE CITY’S SAFE PARKING SITES.
FOR OUR WEEKLY WHY IT MATTERS SEGMENT, VOICE OF SAN DIEGO’S SCOTT LEWIS SAYS PEOPLE LIVING IN THEIR VEHICLES ARE FIGHTING BACK
RVDISPUTE(vosd) (1:13) last words “why it matters” (SS)
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San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria spent a year trying to turn the H Barracks site near the airport into a campus of homeless services. The abandoned military training facility seemed like a perfect fit.
H Barracks opened last year and offered nearly 200 spaces for people living in their RVs and vehicles.
Then the city began a major crackdown on vehicle habitation, especially near Mission Bay.
And between July and September last year, the city issued more than 1,000 citations and referred hundreds of people to H Barracks. Only 59 of them ever went to the safe parking lot.
Now, the city is being taken to court. Plaintiffs who received tickets say the city is violating a 2024 settlement that said the city could not issue citations unless it offered “reasonably available” alternative sites for people to park and stay in their vehicles.
The plaintiffs claim H Barracks is not a reasonable alternative. They have to leave each morning and come back in the evening. And that costs money, and it’s difficult for them to pack up their belongings day-in and day-out.
Now it’s up to a judge to resolve. If he agrees with the plaintiffs, people will be allowed to stay in their cars indefinitely in Mission Bay and in other areas until the city has a better alternative for them.
For Voice of San Diego, I’m Scott Lewis and that’s why it matters.
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A FORMER SAN DIEGO SAILOR CONVICTED OF SPYING FOR CHINA WILL SPEND MORE THAN 16 YEARS IN FEDERAL PRISON.
MILITARY REPORTER ANDREW DYER WAS AT THE COURTHOUSE YESTERDAY (MONDAY).
WEISENTENCE 1 (ad)
At his sentencing Jinchao Wei apologized to the court and to the Navy.
Prosecutors say he was contacted by a Chinese intelligence officer in early 2022 while serving as a machinist mate, second class, on the U-S-S Essex.
For more than a year he sent thousands of pages from sensitive technical manuals to the Chinese. They paid him less than $13,000.Assistant US attorney John Parmley says he betrayed his military and citizenship oaths.
I talked to his shipmates. They feel he’s a traitor. They betrayed them personally. They can’t believe that he had done this.
And for was, relatively speaking, a small amount of money. So, in my view, when you betray your oath to your country, when you betray your fellow sailors, there’s really no other word other than that which is traitor.
Wei was convicted in August on six counts including conspiracy, espionage and violating arms control laws.
From the federal courthouse downtown, Andrew Dyer, KPBS News
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PHARMACISTS WORK IN NEARLY EVERY CORNER OF HEALTH CARE. NEW RESEARCH FINDS THE PRESSURES BEHIND THE COUNTER CAN BE INTENSE.
HEALTH REPORTER HEIDI DE MARCO SAYS A NEW STUDY FROM UC SAN DIEGO SHOWS THEY ARE AT HIGHER RISK FOR SUICIDE.
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RXSTUDY 1 1:14 SOQ
The researchers found pharmacists were about 20 percent more likely to die by suicide than the general population.
KELLY LEE
Anywhere where a medication is dispensed, researched, used, pharmacists have to be at the forefront of that.
Kelly Lee is a psychiatric pharmacist at UC San Diego Skaggs School of Pharmacy. Her team looked at centers for disease control data from 2011 to 2022. They found male pharmacists had about a 25 percent higher risk than men overall. And female pharmacy technicians faced about a 22 percent higher risk than other women.
KELLY LEE
Most of who you will see in a community pharmacy are technicians.
Lee says more research is needed to understand why people in the field die by suicide more often than others. But…When pharmacists struggle, she says stigma keeps many from seeking help.
KELLY LEE
Would they be concerned about our ability to provide care?
Lee says the goal now is action, not just awareness.
Heidi de Marco, KPBS News.
ANCHOR TAG: IF YOU OR SOMEONE YOU KNOW NEEDS HELP, CONTACT THE 988 SUICIDE & CRISIS LIFELINE BY CALLING OR TEXTING THE NUMBER 9-8-8.
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THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT HAS RULES IN PLACE TO LIMIT LOCAL TV STATION OWNERSHIP. BUT THOSE RULES COULD BE RELAXED–OR REVOKED–UNDER THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION.
THIS COMES AS CONSOLIDATION EFFORTS ARE PLAYING OUT ACROSS THE COUNTRY. THE CORPORATE OWNER OF ABC 10 NEWS IN SAN DIEGO RECENTLY REJECTED A TAKEOVER BID BY CONSERVATIVE-LEANING SINCLAIR BROADCAST GROUP…AND NEXSTAR’S LATEST ACQUISITION EFFORT WOULD GIVE THE COMPANY THREE SAN DIEGO TV STATIONS.
REPORTER AMITA SHARMA SPOKE WITH 10 NEWS ALUM LEE SWANSON AND POINT LOMA NAZARENE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM DIRECTOR DEAN NELSON ABOUT HOW CHANGES IN TV STATION OWNERSHIP RULES MIGHT AFFECT LOCAL NEWS.
SINCLAIR (AS) (4:43) “the whole situation changes.” (FEATURE)
Q. Dean, in its refusal of Sinclair’s hostile takeover bid last month, 10News owner EW Scripps Company said it’s open “to evaluating opportunities to enhance shareholder value.” How do you read that statement?
Dean Nelson: There are a lot of people who think it’s a signal of what is called a poison pill. The poison pill is to keep that hostile takeover from happening. The shareholder price of the shares would go down so that the current shareholders would buy more, and they would increase their ownership, which would elevate the price of the company. It’s a drastic way to go because it’s risky in that shareholders invest in things so that they can make more money. If they keep Sinclair from buying the station, is it possible that they ultimately won’t make as much money as they could? On the one hand, this is about journalism. But on the other hand, it’s actually about capitalism. This is the way the economy and big corporations work in America.
Q. Lee, as you know, the largest TV station owner in the country — Nexstar Media Group — owns two San Diego stations KUSI and Fox 5. It’s now in the process of trying to acquire a third – KFMB – the local CBS affiliate by buying rival media company Tegna. If the deal goes through, what would be the impact of one company owning three stations in the same market on local journalism?
Lee Swanson: First of all, they’re doing this because the TV news audience is diminishing. They essentially want a larger piece of a smaller pie so that they can keep their revenue up. And you can’t fault them for that. But they’re also cutting jobs, mostly in newsrooms. And in the case of Nexstar, they have a particular political point of view, and they want to express that through their stations. I don’t care if it’s liberal or conservative or what it might be. That’s not the way journalism ought to work. For them to have a plurality, at least, of the ownership of the markets in the station, there aren’t enough voices. You need more voices. You need as many voices as you can get to express the facts and the opinions in controversial stories.
Q. Dean, the FCC’s Local Television Rule limits a single entity’s ownership to two stations per market. The commission also has the 39 percent rule. Explain that rule. And what’s the point of both rules?
Dean Nelson: The purpose is to address Lee’s concern, which is just having dominant voices on media outlets. The 39% rule isn’t about how many stations you can own. The FCC’s 39% rule is how much of the market do you actually influence. For any station, whether it’s Sinclair or whether it’s Nexstar or whomever to have the voices that control maybe 39% or more of a particular market, that’s against FCC rules. Now, what the FCC is saying under Brendan Carr, and I think there’s actually some truth to it, is those FCC rules don’t matter anymore, given the internet. I look at my students at Point Loma Nazarene, and they aren’t getting their news from broadcast. They’re getting their news from YouTube. They’re getting it from Instagram. And so the FCC is saying it’s a shrinking market so why are we holding on to laws and regulations that were big and important when there were only three or four big broadcast outlets.
Q. So do you see those rules changing?
Dean Nelson: I don’t know how soon, but I definitely see them changing.
Q. Lee, Paramount is attempting a hostile takeover bid of Warner Bros Discovery which owns CNN. Is that attempt, along with the failed Sinclair takeover bid for 10News’ owner EW Scripps and the right-leaning Nexstar’s acquisition of a third local TV station all part of the same story of what’s happening to journalism?
Lee Swanson: I think so. As we talked about, the audience is shrinking, and so the revenues are down, and they’re looking for ways to stay relevant. And the companies are buying up more and more and merging more and more. And we’re not getting the television journalism we’re accustomed to. And the viewers are going elsewhere. And the potential Paramount combination of owning CNN, Paramount already has CBS, and if those two are merged, then the gloves are off. The whole market, the whole situation changes.
TAG: KPBS REACHED OUT TO NEXSTAR MEDIA GROUP, SINCLAIR AND THE FCC FOR COMMENT BUT DID NOT HEAR BACK.
>>
That’s it for the podcast today. As always you can find more San Diego news online at KPBS dot org. I’m Lawrence K. Jackson. Thanks for listening and subscribing; by doing so you are supporting public media and I really want to thank you for that. Have a great day!
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SANDY, Utah — SANDY, Utah (AP) — Sergi Solans had two goals and an assist, Diego Luna added a goal and two assists, and Real Salt Lake beat San Diego FC 4-2 on Saturday night to extend its unbeaten streak to six games.
Morgan Guilavogui scored his first goal in MLS and had an assist for Real Salt Lake (5-1-1). The 28-year-old designated player has five goal contributions in his first six career games.
RSL hasn’t lost since a 1-0 defeat at Vancouver in the season opener.
San Diego (3-3-2) has lost three in a row and is winless in five straight.
Luna opened the scoring in the fifth minute when he re-directed a misplayed pass by Duran Ferree, San Diego’s 19-year-old goalkeeper, into the net.
Moments later, Solans headed home a perfectly-placed cross played by Luna from outside the right corner of the 18-yard box to the back post to make it 2-0. Solans, a 23-year-old forward, flicked a header from the center of the area inside the right post and past the outstretched arm of Ferree to make it 3-1 in the 37th minute.
Guilavogui slammed home a first-touch shot to give RSL a three-goal lead in the 45th.
Marcus Ingvartsen scored a goal in the 14th minute and Anders Dreyer converted from the penalty spot in the 66th for San Diego.
Ingvartsen has five goals and an assist this season and has 10 goal contributions (seven goals, three assists) in 16 career MLS appearances.
Rafael Cabral had three saves for RSL.
Ferree finished with five saves.
___
AP soccer: https://apnews.com/soccer
When John Resnick opened Campfire on a quaint little street in Carlsbad, Calif., in 2016, some locals weren’t sure what to think. The coastal enclave wasn’t exactly awash in innovative, chef-driven establishments, so it was a shock to see the dining room consistently full. Early on, one woman wondered aloud to Resnick, “Where did all these people come from?”
It’s a moment he remembers vividly. “I was struck by her statement, because I think she was surprised that so many other people in Carlsbad were there,” Resnick says.
The rest of the culinary world would take some time to catch up to what was happening. In 2019, when Michelin expanded to rate restaurants throughout all of California—not just the San Francisco area—Addison was the only one in San Diego to earn a star. But since emerging from the pandemic, the region’s food scene has grown dramatically. Driven by outstanding farms, ingredients, a bumper crop of talented chefs, and a G.D.P. approximately the size of New Zealand or Greece, San Diego County has become one of America’s most underrated dining destinations.
Campfire’s octopus, chorizo, and celery-root entrée.
Gage Forster
Perhaps no single restaurant is a better emblem for this shift than chef William Bradley’s Addison, which opened in 2006. After landing his first star, Bradley knew he wanted more. To get them, he transformed his French-leaning fare to serve what he calls California Gastronomy, which combines the cultures of SoCal with impeccable ingredients and wildly impressive techniques, prizing flavor over flair. Michelin responded, awarding Addison a second star in 2022, and making it the first Southern California three-star restaurant just a year later. The accolade has created a halo effect, attracting culinary tourists from around the world.
Berry beet tartlets at San Diego’s three-star stalwart Addison.
Eric Wolfinger
“Earning three stars forces the global dining community to pay attention to a place that may not have been on their radar before,” says chef Eric Bost, a partner in Resnick’s four Carlsbad establishments.
Resnick recruited Bost, who spent time at award-winning outposts of Restaurant Guy Savoy, to run Jeune et Jolie, which he led to a star in 2021. They’ve since taken over an old boogie-board factory down the street and converted it to an all-day restaurant and bakery, Wildland. The space also hosts an exquisite tasting-counter experience called Lilo, which was given a Michelin star mere months after opening in April 2025. And as Resnick and Bost grew their successful Carlsbad operation, chef Roberto Alcocer earned a Michelin star for his Mexican fine-dining spot Valle in nearby Oceanside.
The stylish tasting counter at Michelin one-star Lilo in Carlsbad.
Kimberly Motos
About 25 miles to the south, another affluent coastal community is going through its own culinary glow up. In La Jolla, chef Tara Monsod and the hospitality group Puffer Malarkey Collective opened the stylish French steakhouse Le Coq. Chef Erik Anderson, formerly of Michelin two-star Coi, is preparing to launch Roseacre. And last year, Per Se alums Elijah Arizmendi and Brian Hung left New York to open the elegant tasting-menu restaurant Lucien, lured by the ingredients they’d get to serve. “A major reason we chose San Diego is the quality and diversity of the produce,” Arizmendi explains. “San Diego County has more small farms than anywhere else in the U.S., and its many microclimates allow farmers to grow an incredible range of ingredients year-round.”
Wildland’s spicy Italian sandwich.
Gage Forster
Chef Travis Swikard has also been a tireless advocate for the region’s ingredients since he returned to San Diego, his hometown, and opened Mediterranean-influenced Callie in 2021. There’s no sophomore slump with his latest effort, the French Riviera–inspired Fleurette in La Jolla, where he’s serving his take on classics like leeks vinaigrette and his San Diego “Bouillabaisse” with local red sheepshead fish and spiny lobster. Its food is bright, produce-driven, and attentive in execution, while the dining room maintains a relaxed and unpretentious style of service. And Swikard sees that approach cohering into a regional style with a strong network of professionals behind it.
“It’s really nice that we are developing our own identity, not trying to be like L.A. or any other market, just highlighting what’s great about the San Diego lifestyle and ingredients,” he says. “Similar to New York, a chef community is starting to develop where chefs are supporting each other. There is a true sense of pride to be cooking here.”
Top: In La Jolla, Lucien serves ocean whitefish with tomatoes turned into concasse, sabayon, and other expressions.
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