San Diego, CA
Rain Still Lingering in San Diego Forecast Through End of Week

Rain is coming to replace the mild, dry weather, at least temporarily, forecasters said Thursday.
The latest predictions have showers lasting through the end of the week before skies clear up again on Saturday.
“The most widespread rainfall is expected to spread southward across the area late tonight and Friday,” said the National Weather Service in its local forecast discussion.
“Drier for the weekend into early next week. Daytime temperatures will be a little warmer for the weekend, then cooler for early next week.”
Periods of gusty winds are expected on county desert and mountain slopes into deserts locally in the afternoons and evenings through Friday night.
Mountains will see partly cloudy conditions this week, with some fog and rain and highs in the upper 50s to low 60s. Deserts should also see cloudy conditions, with light winds, chances for mild showers, and highs in the upper 40s to mid-50s.
The coast is expected to see foggy and partly cloudy conditions through the week, with light wind showers by mid-week, some overnight rain by Friday, and highs in the mid-60s.
Thursday’s San Diego surf forecast includes a moderate-risk rip current, with surf from 1 to 3 feet, sets to 4 feet on west-facing beaches and west swell from 280 degrees.
No hazardous marine conditions are expected through Friday.
City News Service contributed to this report.

San Diego, CA
Impassioned students, activists plead to save services after mayor delivers budget plan

Students and residents made impassioned pleas at a meeting of the San Diego City Council on Monday, hoping to keep the city from reducing recreation center hours and closing libraries on Sundays and Mondays.
“Here we are begging for crumbs in your budget,” one student yelled at councilmembers.
“A lot of us learned to dance at El Toyo Park,” said another woman. “And I learned how to play tennis at MLK Park.”
The proposed cuts are part of Mayor Todd Gloria’s budget plan to make up a nearly $260 million budget deficit. He presented his final budget proposal to councilmembers on Monday.
Community advocate Francine Maxwell urged councilmembers not to rubber-stamp the budget. She urged council to cut people and not programs.
“At a minimum, you should be cutting deputy-level salaries,” Maxwell said. “Be bold leaders and cut them. We need our services. The middle management bloat is wrong.”
With the budget now in the council’s court to start making amendments, Councilmembers Sean Elo Rivera and Henry Foster said they’re looking to prioritize rec centers and libraries, especially after protests against plans to merge the Carmel Valley police station resulted in that proposal being scrapped, with nearly $800,000 restored to the police department.
“Keeping folks safe is our top priority, but that requires more than just, you know, putting cops on the street or firefighters on engines,” Elo-Rivera said. “That’s important. And if young people don’t have a place to go, a safe place to go after school, that makes us less safe.”
Elo-Rivera suggested keeping libraries and rec centers open full-time with the $11 million expected to roll in next year from paid parking at Balboa Park. He’d also like to see out-of-towners pay for parking at the zoo, new revenue that could help students focus on their future full-time at San Diego area libraries.
“I live in a house with five other people,” said high school senior Jaime Lopez Gill. “It’s always chaotic. There’s no personal space. Going to these study rooms, I can focus on myself and put the best I can out there toward my education.”
The council will meet over the next three weeks to make amendments to the mayor’s proposed budget. Councilmembers will vote on the final budget on June 10.
San Diego, CA
Sharp’s new neuroscience hospital runs nearly full two weeks after opening

In its first two weeks of operation, the new neuroscience center at Sharp Grossmont Hospital has averaged an 80% occupancy rate. That number is not terribly surprising, given that the La Mesa medical facility treated the 10th-most acute strokes in the state and handled the largest volume in San Diego County in 2023, according to state data.
Retired New York firefighter Thomas Daniels, 88, was among the first to occupy one of the 50 beds at what is officially called the Sharp Grossmont Hospital for Neuroscience. Admitted to Grossmont’s emergency department after having a stroke on April 29, he was transferred to the new center one day after it opened on May 1.
Thirteen days later, he was still there, feeling significant pain in his face, but able to chuckle over the enthusiastic welcome that occurred when the center’s first patients arrived.
“They were cheering for me and I said, ‘vote for me’ like I was running for governor,” he said. “That’s my way, just having fun.”
His ability to recall those memories made such a short amount of time after suffering a major neurological emergency is the entire point of building this new hospital within a hospital in the first place.
By dedicating space for neurological maladies, and filling that space with nurses, technicians and physicians all specificallytrained to handle brain-related care, the idea is to make it more likely that patients will receive medical interventions they need as quickly as possible.
Especially with stroke, the phrase “time is brain” has been the mantra in neurological care since the 1990s.
The speed and precision with which clot-busting drugs can be administered and surgery performed is literally the difference between full recovery and living the rest of one’s life with severely impaired movement. Or not surviving at all.
California hospitals are graded on their overall stroke mortality rates, a calculation of how many patients diagnosed with strokes die during treatment that is adjusted to account for overall underlying health conditions and other factors. In 2023, the most recent year for which data are available, Grossmont’s state-issued stroke rating was “as expected,” though results have been mixed, with some “below expected” ratings in previous years.
The goal of all hospitals is to consistently achieve a “better” rating, indicating that their risk-adjusted mortality rates are lower than would be expected when compared to similarly sized peers.
While not explicitly referencing state ratings, Dr. Gregory Apel, an emergency medicine specialist and Grossmont’s chief medical officer, said that breaking off neurological care into its own hospital on the larger medical campus, one with its own entrance and its own specially trained staff, will allow care to reach new heights.
Having dedicated space, he said, allows the recruitment of physicians who specialize more deeply. Already, for example, Grossmont has recruited several endovascular neurosurgeons who are able to conduct both minimally invasive brain surgeries and larger “open” procedures that often require larger openings in the skull for access.
“We have specialists here that are coming from the highest institutions and fellowship programs to really provide that level of care that doesn’t exist outside of a neuroscience center,” Apel said.
The physical structure of the new hospital also enables deeper subspecialization. Several rooms in their own set-aside section of the larger facility are designated as an Epilepsy Monitoring Unit and are equipped with special seizure-monitoring equipment. This new feature justifies bringing in a whole new category of subspecialists.

“There is actually a fellowship program for epileptologists who are neurologists who do nothing but seizure-related care,” Apel said. “We are in the process of recruiting to get specifically that specialty for that unit to be able to deal with the most complex seizures.”
It includes its own 16-bed neurological intensive care unit, as well as another 16-bed “progressive” care unit for those whose conditions are not severe enough to need intensive care. And there are 18 additional beds dedicated to rehabilitation, a major function of any neurology program. Those with strokes and other conditions often must spend many hours with physical therapists relearning once routine movements affected by the temporary loss of blood flow in the brain.
Rehabilitation beds are just a short walk from the neuroscience center’s beating heart, a cavernous physical therapy gymnasium filled with specialized exercise equipment designed for the kind of tasks that, with proper guidance, can help re-activate damaged nerve pathways and rebuild atrophied muscle tissue.
It’s an exponential upgrade over Grossmont’s former gym, which filled a single hospital hallway.
Scott Evans, chief strategy officer and market CEO for Sharp HealthCare, pointed out a special “studio apartment” room just off the main gym floor. This space is configured with all of the equipment a person would need to use when they return home after a serious neurological incident, such as a stroke.
“This is where we can simulate the activities of daily living,” Evans said. “They can start practicing doing their own clothes again, washing the dishes, making meals, getting in and out of the bathtub.”

The center treats far more than strokes. Brain and spine tumors, complex spine surgeries, movement disorders such as Parkinson’s disease, and vision problems related to neurological conditions are also services allocated to the neuroscience hospital, which does not have its own dedicated operating rooms. Surgeries will be performed in Grossmont’s Burr Heart and Vascular Center that opened in 2019.
Many who use the new physical therapy gym will be staying in the hospital’s rehabilitation unit, working daily to regain function before they can be discharged home. But the facility is also open to outpatients, those who are already home, but who require ongoing specialized workouts to help them handle neurological conditions.
By 9 a.m. on a recent morning, a dozen people were already using the gym, including AJ Fiume, 27, a La Mesa resident with cerebral palsy. He spent time using a hand bike, then went through a specialized muscle-building session with a physical therapist.

“That was probably the second or third time I’ve been able to get on the bike like that in my life,” he said. “You know, it’s not like you can do this stuff at 24 Hour Fitness.”
There is more to come. An upstairs doctor’s office will be staffed by a full complement of neurological specialists.
The point, stressed Apel, is to put as many neurological services as possible in one centralized location, decreasing the amount of travel necessary to make appointments.
“You will be able to walk in there and see your neurosurgeon, stroke neurologist, rehabilitation physician … I mean, it’s almost a revolving door of what specialties will be available to patients in one location,” Apel said.
For now, stroke patients and others with emergency neurological problems must be pushed through long hospital corridors to get from the ER to the neuroscience hospital, which is on the opposite side of the sprawling medical campus.
But Evans said that there are plans for a much straighter and subterranean path in the future.
“We’re going to dig a tunnel right under there to connect directly with the emergency department,” the executive said, gesturing south toward Grossmont’s emergency entrance closer to Grossmont Center Drive. “That will make it even faster to get over here.
“We want to make it as fast as possible.”
San Diego, CA
Padres pregame: Jose Iglesias at third base, Manny Machado DHing in series finale

At one point, Jose Iglesias started 22 straight games. His start at third base on Sunday in the series finale against the Mariners (1:10 p.m. on Padres.TV) is just his second start in the last 12 games, a product of the Padres welcoming the likes of Luis Arraez, Jason Heyward, Jackson Merrill and Jake Cronenworth off the injured list.
Whether a conversation needed to be had, Padres manager Mike Shildt had it with the 35-year-old veteran.
“I went up to him, Croney’s back, your role’s going to change,” Shildt said earlier on the homestand. “ ‘I get it. I get it, whatever you need. I just love this team.’ The fact is (he’s) willing to do whatever it takes just to win game. And right now it’s moving around a little bit, especially after we get some days off and we have a longer stretch of games where he’s a valuable piece to go get Manny (Machado) a day, (Xander Bogaerts) a day.”
That day arrived Sunday.
At least a half-day off for Machado, who will serve as the designated hitter. The Padres are off Monday before playing nine straight games. They will also play 13 in a row two different times before the end of June.
So even if the Padres remain healthy, Iglesias will be needed to get the team through that stretch, just as Tyler Wade —who has one start in the last 10 games — will be needed.
Iglesias is hitting .228/.283/.272 on the season and hit .237/.293/.289 while starting 22 straight games.
Iglesias will bat ninth on Sunday as the Padres look to avoid a sweep and just their second three-game losing streak of the season.
Gavin Sheets is also starting his second game this season in left field as the Padres continue to look for production for the position. Jason Heyward started in left field on Saturday but had been giving way to the right-handed-hitting Brandon Lockridge against right-handed starters this week.
Sheets, who hit his sixth homer to account for the Padres’ only run on Saturday, will bat sixth.
Sunday squad. pic.twitter.com/D36wDDnbpY
— San Diego Padres (@Padres) May 18, 2025
The Padres have lost four of their last six games but their 27-17 record is still fourth-best in baseball, one game behind the Dodgers (29-17) in the NL West.
Here is how the Mariners (25-19, 1st in AL West) will line up for the series finale:
Wrapping up the first leg of the #VedderCup with some day baseball 😎 pic.twitter.com/bBod2dkpzq
— Seattle Mariners (@Mariners) May 18, 2025
Sunday’s pitching matchup
Mariners RHP Bryan Woo (4-1, 2.84 ERA)
The Cal Poly product has quality starts in all but two of his eight starts this year and has struck out 50 against eight walks over 50⅔ innings. Woo has been much better at home (0.93 ERA, 19⅓ innings) than he has been on the road (4.02 ERA, 31⅓ innings). He beat the Padres last year, allowing two runs over 6⅔ innings in his only start against them.
Here is how current Padres have fared against Woo:
Padres RHP Michael King (4-1, 2.32 ERA)
He has allowed two runs or fewer in seven of his nine starts this year. King has a 1.64 ERA in six starts so far at Petco Park and a 3.63 ERA in three road starts. He has a 1.98 ERA in 132/3 innings against the Mariners, including two earned runs in 11 innings (1.64 ERA) in two starts last year, both losses for King.
Here is how King has fared against current Padres:
Originally Published:
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