San Diego, CA
How tariffs on products from Mexico and Canada could impact San Diegans
Goods from all over the world pass through California’s ports of entry each day. It’s a trade agreement with Mexico that has kept the flow of commerce going for three decades. So how does a 25% tariff on imports change the game?
“Twenty-five percent is too much,” truck driver Edmundo Rojo said.
Rojo says he’s been hauling goods from China that he picks up in Long Beach to Mexico for 33 years. He says business has already slowed.
Joaquin Luken, executive director for the Smart Border Coalition, says that in this case, the cure could be worse than the disease.
“The importer is just going to order less items from the exporter that creates an economic slowdown,” Luken said.
There are three commercial land ports of entry in Southern California. By far the busiest is Otay Mesa. Luken says of the 6,000 semi-trucks that go through those ports, 4,000 to 4,500 of them come through Otay Mesa.
Consumers buying cars, electronic appliances and produce will likely feel the immediate impact.
Businesses in San Diego are concerned about the tariffs on Canada and Mexico pushing up prices for their raw materials. NBC 7’s Kelvin Henry spoke to business owners and economists who said the higher prices are going to be tough on customers.
“There are things the U.S. sends to Mexico, and Mexico is planning on imposing reciprocal tariffs as well, and that just creates this trade war,“ Luken said.
President Donald Trump says the tariffs are to force the two U.S. neighbors to step up their fight against fentanyl trafficking and stop illegal immigration. But he also wants to eliminate the Americas’ trade imbalances and push more factories to relocate in the U.S.
“You fight fentanyl smuggling with technology and added staffing, which is much needed at ports of entry,” Luken said.
Rojo finds himself caught in the middle. He says an added 25% tariff could be the end of the road for him.
“I have been doing this most of my life, and I don’t know what is going to happen now,” Rojo said.
The Smart Border executive director expects a compromise will be reached before or shortly after tariffs are fully implemented.
While tariffs on goods from Mexico are on hold for now, people whose jobs rely on cross-border commerce say it’s a stressful time, as they anxiously await what happens next. NBC 7’s Joe Little reports.
San Diego, CA
5 things to know about Iran’s supreme leader Ali Khamenei
San Diego, CA
Joan Endres – San Diego Union-Tribune
Joan Endres
OBITUARY
Born January 1939 in Cincinnati Ohio. Died February 14, 2026, in San Diego, California, with her sons at her side. Her beloved husband Dean passed away in 2010.
Joan was the only child of Thomas and Edna Palmer. In 1943, the family moved to San Diego, where Joan graduated from Helix High School in 1956.
In 1957 Joan married Dean Endres of San Diego, where they raised two sons. Joan followed her two great passions outside the home, the Arts, and Gardening. Both activities being a way to bring beauty to others and to the community.
Joan received a degree in Environmental Design from San Diego State University, and afterwords worked at UCSD, for the Campus Architect.
As an artist, Joan worked in various media, especially ceramics. She was active in many cultural and arts organizations, eventually becoming President of the Combined Organization for the Visual Arts (COVA). Later she turned to gardening, with the Water Conservation Garden at Cuyamaca Community College and the Master Gardener Association of San Diego County.
Joan is survived by her son Jeff and wife Katrin, grandson Jackson, and son Todd Endres, all of La Mesa, and sisters Alice Buck of Phoenix, Elaine Kennedy of San Diego, Nancy and husband Don Jones of Vista, Eva Budzinski of Cloudcroft, New Mexico, and their children and grandchildren.
There will be a Celebration of Life for Joan in the near future. Those who wish to attend should contact celebratejoanuvart@gmail.com to receive details when they are confirmed. In lieu of flowers, the family respectfully suggests a donation to the Water Conservation Garden or the Diego Visual Arts Network (SDVAN).
San Diego, CA
San Diego State moves back into NCAA Tournament field in latest ESPN Bracketology
The San Diego State Aztecs’ have moved off the bubble and back into the NCAA Tournament’s Field of 64 in the latest ESPN’s Bracketology projections.
The Aztecs must feel like a yo-yo, but now it’s in a good way. Bracket expert Joe Lunardi moved them from the bottom of the First Four Out — No. 72 — to holding the Mountain West’s automatic bid after an 89-72 home romp Wednesday night over Utah State, which had held the auto-bid in bracketology for a few weeks now.
Lunardi now has the Aztecs as the No. 11 seed in the West Region, with a projected first-round date against former MW rival BYU in Portland.
Lunardi wrote that SDSU’s auto-bid “shifts the entire bubble.”
Wednesday night’s victory not only pulled the Aztecs (19-8, 13-4) into a tie with Utah State (23-5, 13-4) atop the MW standings, but it was just their second Quad 1 victory in six such opportunities.
SDSU’s next two games are both Quad 1 chances, at New Mexico on Saturday and then at Boise State on Tuesday night.
The win lifted the Aztecs only one spot in the NCAA NET Rankings, to No. 43. Those rankings are used by the NCAA Tournament Selection Committee as the primary sorting tool for selection and seeding for March Madness.
SDSU’s resume for earning an at-large berth has been on shaky ground all season, and was seriously damaged last week when the Aztecs lost at home to Grand Canyon and were then routed at Colorado State, both Quad 2 games.
SDSU’s best bet to assure a trip to March Madness for the sixth straight season is to win the MW tournament in Las Vegas and claim the automatic bid. That requires winning three games in as many days, and perhaps a third showdown against the Aggies, who beat the Aztecs 71-66 in Logan on Jan. 31.
Lunardi now has Utah State projected as an at-large team, but still with the No. 7 seed in the East, facing No. 10 Texas A&M in a first-round game in St. Louis.
New Mexico (21-7, 12-5), lurking just a game behind SDSU and USU, has dropped from the Last Four In at No. 68 to the First Four Out at No. 70.
The Aztecs were the unanimous preseason pick to win the MW regular-season title in their final season in the league before moving into the Pac-12 along with Utah State, Boise State, Fresno State and Colorado State.
Saturday’s game at New Mexico is set to tip off at 11 a.m. PT and will air on CBS.
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