San Diego, CA
Opinion: The San Diego Regional Chamber of Commerce needs a leader who understands cross-border relations
On behalf of the Tijuana Chamber of Commerce, I urge the leadership of the San Diego Regional Chamber of Commerce to select for its next president and CEO a person with strong qualifications to support the development of our San Diego-Tijuana binational region. With more than 2,000 members and a tradition of building relationships with its Mexican neighbors, advancing a binational agenda, and promoting a regional identity, the San Diego chamber has been and must continue to be an indispensable player in cultivating the vast potential of the binational region. That role calls for a special set of abilities and experiences in its leader.
For 50 years I have owned a Tijuana business dependent on cross-border conditions. I have been active in Tijuana chamber affairs for 30 years and became chairman in 2022. Our Tijuana Chamber of Commerce serves the interests of 3,500 members, including many with significant involvement in the San Diego economy.
Ideally, the future president and CEO will be conversant with the issues of regulation of trade, immigration, and investment in public and business infrastructure on both sides of the border. Our region has a vital interest in the evolution of supply chains and the development of nearshoring, along with the renegotiation of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement. They will have regionally rooted binational expertise and experience: a bilingual, bicultural leader embodying the region’s unique identity who has lived and worked at the interface of U.S. and Mexico, building bridges between their economies. The successful candidate will have demonstrated leadership in cross-border collaboration, having played a pivotal role in promoting the region’s cross-border trade and infrastructure. On the U.S. side, the future president and CEO will energetically play a role in the community of entities also engaged in building and sustaining cross-border relations, including but not limited to the San Diego EDC, the Tourism Authority, the Otay Mesa and San Ysidro Chambers of Commerce, Cross Border Xpress (CBX) and the Smart Border Coalition. He or she will have the capacity to provide visionary leadership for a binational mega-region and possess strong regional and national networks of influence and relationships.
This person will fully understand what Tijuana and Baja California are today. Tijuana long ago left behind its old identity as a border town catering to visitors crossing from San Diego. Today it is the second-largest city on the West Coast of North America after Los Angeles and an important global manufacturing hub for medical devices, motor vehicles, audio and video products, and electronic components. Its health sector provides services to “medical tourists” from the U.S. every year. Binational co-manufacturing sees many products crossing the border multiple times in different phases of production. Tijuana has the 16th-busiest airport in Latin America, accessible to San Diego through the remarkably successful Cross Border Xpress passenger terminal and international port of entry, used by more than 4 million travelers in 2024.
San Diego County and the greater Tijuana area have become interlocked, tightly bound, intensely interactive partners. A prime indicator: on an average day, 148,000 routine border crossers, 54 million per year, come north. In fiscal 2024, more than $69 billion in two-way goods trade flowed through the cargo land port of entry, with the explosive expansion of large commercial building around the port on the U.S. side as a visible testimony to this dynamic.
Jerry Sanders, the San Diego chamber’s former president and CEO, raised the organization’s commitment to partnership with Tijuana and Baja California to an unprecedented level. His successor will benefit from that strong foundation on which to build. With the right combination of strengths, this leader will honor the Sanders legacy by working to further fulfill the bright promise of our extraordinary region.
Palombo is the chairman of the Tijuana Chamber of Commerce and resides in San Diego and Tijuana.
San Diego, CA
Opinion: Proposed federal rule would hammer beauty industry
Beauty and wellness are a staple of American culture. Thousands of citizens visit our spas and salons throughout the United States for critical, everyday grooming services they rely on. However, if the U.S. Department of Education has its way, Americans could soon have trouble finding qualified professionals to perform these traditional self-care rituals.
The department is proposing a new rule that would end access to many professional beauty programs — an important and growing trade. The department also is mistakenly labeling professional beauty programs as “low-value programs,” even though these programs offer students almost immediate employment opportunities providing professionals a flexible work-life balance.
Driven by high demand for skincare and hair services, there are currently more than 1.4 million professionals throughout the U.S. who work in the professional beauty industry. The professional beauty and wellness industry’s economic trajectory tells a story of continued and sustained growth. Growing at an annual rate of 7% from 2022 to 2024, according to McKinsey & Co., the United States ranks among the 10 fastest-growing wellness markets worldwide.
But even a robust and resilient industry like ours cannot overcome bad policy decisions that threaten an entire industry. Congress never included an accountability metric for certificate programs like cosmetology or massage therapy programs in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act does contain an accountability metric called “Do No Harm,” which is designed to keep colleges and universities that offer degree programs or graduate-level certificates accountable to the American people.
The accountability metric for degree programs, when applied to certificate programs, will eliminate opportunities for Americans to receive federal student aid, including Pell Grants, to unlock a career in cosmetology or massage therapy. The Department of Education has acknowledged using the Do No Harm provision as an accountability metric will have a severe negative impact on the cosmetology and massage schools nationwide, and determined that 92% of accredited cosmetology and massage therapy schools eventually will lose access to all federal student aid, including Pell Grants, for their students and most likely will be forced to close in the near future.
The one saving grace is that the department has not finalized its proposed rule, and it is not too late for the public to tell the department that this rule does not fit the bill for professional beauty students and schools. Comments must be received on or by May 20. You can submit your comments on the Accountability in Higher Education and Access through Demand-driven Workforce Pell (AHEAD) rule through the Federal eRulemaking Portal at regulations.gov/commenton/ED-2026-OPE-0100-0001. The department will not accept comments submitted by fax or by email or comments submitted after the comment period closes.
Any new rule adopted by the agency needs to account for the overall demographic and work-life balance goals of students and the professional beauty industry. These students and future small business owners deserve the same opportunities as students pursuing careers in other disciplines and fields.
Lynch is the owner and chief executive officer of the Poway-based Bellus Academy and the founding chair of the nonprofit Beauty Changes Lives, which awards nearly $500,000 in scholarships annually.
San Diego, CA
San Diego health officials monitor hantavirus situation as cruise ship passengers return to U.S.
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — American passengers from a cruise ship hit with a hantavirus outbreak are back in the United States.
San Diego County health officials say they are monitoring the situation and there is no need for panic.
“The risk to Californians is really low and especially here in San Diego. Since the year 2000, we’ve only had 4 cases of hantavirus and the majority of those were in travel related cases so not even acquired here locally,” Ankita Kadakia, deputy public health officer for the County of San Diego, said.
According to the CDC, hantavirus is spread through contact with infected rodents.
“The virus can be in their saliva, feces or droppings,” Kadakia said.
San Diego County does see cases of rodents infected with hantavirus, but the strain seen locally is not the same strain connected to the cruise ship outbreak.
“The vast majority of strains of hantavirus are mouse or animal to human transmission. Not human to human transmission. So the Andes strain, which is found in Argentina, there is evidence that there is human to human transmission,” Dr. Ahmed Salem, a pulmonologist at Sharp Memorial Hospital, said.
Salem treated hantavirus during the 2012 Yosemite National Park outbreak.
“One of the ways you die from hantavirus is you get a collapse of your cardiac system and your pulmonary system and you have to go on something called ECMO. It’s one of the most aggressive forms of life support that you can do. So I do remember that case, and unfortunately, that person passed away,” Salem said.
There is currently no cure or vaccine for hantavirus. Health officials stress that for those who were not on the cruise ship, the risk of contracting the virus remains low.
This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.
San Diego, CA
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