San Diego, CA
Opinion: The city should honor its agreements with the Padres
The city is facing a serious budget crisis, and no one who has spent time in public office would suggest otherwise. San Diego is confronting difficult fiscal realities that will require hard decisions about priorities, services and long-term financial stability. But those challenges should not lead elected officials to abandon longstanding agreements or attempt to shift responsibility for the city’s structural problems onto one of San Diego’s most important civic partners.
That is why recent comments from Councilmember Sean Elo-Rivera about the city’s contractual public safety obligations around Petco Park are so concerning. At a time when San Diego is preparing to welcome new Padres ownership, this is not the first impression the city should be making. Suggesting that the city may disregard existing commitments sends the wrong message about whether San Diego is a reliable partner.
Framing this as Padres versus arts and culture is not accurate. The city knows what its contractual obligations are, and difficult budget decisions should not be made by pretending one of San Diego’s strongest civic partners caused the deficit.
It also ignores the Padres’ longstanding commitment to San Diego. Unlike the former San Diego sports team that left the city, the Padres stayed, invested and helped transform East Village into one of the country’s most successful urban ballpark districts. The organization continues investing in the ballpark, the Ballpark District and the broader community while helping shape the area into a vibrant sports and entertainment destination.
The Padres have invested approximately $150 million into Petco Park, improving and modernizing a city-owned facility while creating a thriving destination that supports local businesses, jobs and tourism. In fact, Petco Park was just named Sports Facility of the Year by the Sports Business Journal, underscoring its status as one of the premier venues in all of sports. Gallagher Square has become a year-round public gathering space for families and community events, while the Padres Foundation invests millions of dollars each year in youth sports, education, military families and underserved communities throughout the region.
Public safety around the ballpark is critical to this continued success. Residents and visitors should feel safe riding transit, walking city streets, parking nearby and staying after games and events. The Padres fund substantial police and public safety costs associated with activity inside the ballpark. The city is responsible for policing public streets and maintaining safety in the surrounding public areas. That is not a special favor to the Padres. It is part of the city’s contractual obligations and its core responsibility to maintain safe and functional public infrastructure.
An independent analysis by the San Diego Regional Economic Development Corp. found that Petco Park activity generates approximately $913 million in regional economic impact annually while supporting thousands of jobs and generating millions in tax revenue that helps fund essential public services.
If City Hall is serious about fiscal accountability, it should examine its own spending first. A new San Diego County Taxpayers Association report found that since fiscal year 2021, City Council offices have added 51 positions, a 47% staffing increase, bringing total council staffing to roughly 160 positions and the total council office budget to about $22.5 million. Those additions cost taxpayers nearly $10 million annually, even as San Diego’s population remained essentially flat.
Notably, Councilmember Elo-Rivera approved additional staffing increases for council offices again this fiscal year, even as the city’s broader financial outlook continued to deteriorate. That makes his criticism of the Padres particularly misplaced, given that council operations grew dramatically under his watch, including while he served as council president.
San Diego’s financial challenges are real but solving them will require City Hall to look inward, make responsible fiscal decisions and address the structural issues that created this deficit in the first place.
San Diegans are already facing one of the highest costs of living in the country while watching the city struggle with homelessness, deteriorating infrastructure, public safety concerns and basic services. Residents deserve a serious conversation about how City Hall plans to address those challenges and restore long-term fiscal stability, not attempts to pit civic priorities against one another or shift blame onto longstanding community partners.
Cities earn strong reputations by keeping their word, especially when budgets are difficult. San Diego should honor its agreements.
Roberts was a San Diego City Council member from 1987 to 1994 and a member of the San Diego County Board of Supervisors from 1995 to 2018. Kersey is the president and CEO of the San Diego County Taxpayers Association and a former San Diego City Council member.
San Diego, CA
San Diego’s 6-month streak of a falling jobless rate comes to an end
SAN DIEGO — San Diego County saw its six-month streak of a falling unemployment rate come to an end in June, as teachers went on summer recess, but the region still managed to eke out a small net gain in job growth last month. The latest figures from the state Employment Development Department show a jobless rate of 4.4%, up from 3.9% in May, but still lower than the county’s year-ago rate of …
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San Diego, CA
Daily Business Report: July 17, 2026, San Diego Metro Magazine
Letter to the Editor: Apartment Vacancy Rates Paint an Incomplete Picture
By David Malcolm | Voice of San Diego
In last Saturday’s “Politics Report,” Will Huntsberry tackled the thorny issue of apartment vacancy rates (apparently the highest in this century) and the impact on affordability. He also correctly wrote that the city of San Diego needs “strategies beyond build, build, build.”
What’s Really Happening
My company owns and operates apartment rental complexes in San Diego County (San Marcos, Encinitas, La Jolla, El Cajon and South Bay) and in Temecula (Riverside County). Here is what we are seeing.
Base rents are stable … but offers of two months’ free rent are common. That is a de facto 16.7 percent reduction on annualized rents. Reducing base rents is not possible in the face of rent control measures and, even more importantly, bank loan covenants. Thus, concessions like two months’ free rent are not hard to find.
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New study shows promising step forward in improving Parkinson’s treatment
by Nicole Abrams | Times of San Diego
A small molecule was found to increase the benefits and reduce the side effects of the standard drug for Parkinson’s disease, according to a new study from UC San Diego startup called Sinopia Biosciences.
L-dopa or levodopa is the main treatment for Parkinson’s disease, but its benefits wane over time and can cause involuntary movements called dyskinesia. About 90% of patients with Parkinson’s disease develop dyskinesia in 9 or more years of using L-dopa, and 70% develop motor fluctuations in 9 or more years of using the drug, according to the study.
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San Diego, CA
EXCLUSIVE: Ignition Press Welcomes eBay Live & Revenge Of to San Diego Comic-Con Ignition Pavilion
The Ignition Press – Ignition Pavilion is leveling up in a big way for San Diego Comic-Con this year.
Following last year’s successful debut, Ignition Press is expanding its offsite with several major new partners, transforming the Ignition Pavilion into a hub for comics, collectibles, livestream shopping, food, and drinks. The free experience at the San Diego Wine & Culinary Center (200 Harbor Dr.) will now feature activations from eBay Live and Revenge Of, alongside the return of Seven Seas Roasting Company and several new fan experiences.
One of the biggest additions this year is a dedicated eBay Live selling lounge, where livestreams will broadcast throughout the convention, bringing Comic-Con to fans around the world.
Stop by throughout the week to find live sketches and signings with comic legends Bill Sienkiewicz (hosted by Big Clutch) and Jim Lee (hosted by ANZ Collects), while Storage Wars star Rene Nezhoda will showcase a rare PSA-pedigreed collection of vintage, Silver Age, and Bronze Age comics.
Fans can also tune in for the debut of an exclusive DC x eBay Live Absolute Batman & Absolute Catwoman connecting cover, shop signed Ignition Press SDCC exclusives, rare comics, and other collectibles, and catch appearances from fan-favorite creators and influencers throughout the weekend.
The Pavilion also welcomes Los Angeles lifestyle brand Revenge Of, making its San Diego Comic-Con debut with a curated comics and pop culture experience, while its sister company, FTB.Design, is handling the Pavilion’s production design.
“Both eBay Live and Revenge Of TV are going to give both fans onsite and at home the opportunity to get in on special programming and chances to get SDCC exclusive merchandise,” said Creative Director Jeremy Haun. “We’re doing something new, big, and different here at the Ignition Pavilion. You’re not going to want to miss it.”
Coffee lovers can once again grab a free drink from Seven Seas Roasting Company between 12pm-4pm, Thursday through Sunday, by signing up for the Ignition Insiders newsletter. The first 200 fans each day can redeem a voucher for coffee, espresso drinks, chai, or tea.
Later each afternoon (Thursday-Saturday, 5pm-7pm), the coffee bar transforms into the Ignition Pavilion Happy Hour, serving themed cocktails, beer, wine, mocktails, and complimentary drink tickets with qualifying purchases. Fans can also preorder a limited-edition bottle of Ignition Proof Rum, created in partnership with Los Angeles distillery The Obscure.
The Ignition Pavilion is free and open to the public at the following times:
- Wednesday, July 22: 5:00pm-9:00pm
- Thursday, July 23: 12:00pm-8:00pm
- Friday, July 24: 12:00pm-8:00pm
- Saturday, July 25: 12:00pm-8:00pm
- Sunday, July 26: 12:00pm-6:00pm
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