San Diego, CA
San Diego City Council OKs compromise spending plan, capping a contentious budget season
Weeks of debate and negotiation culminated Tuesday with the San Diego City Council adopting a compromise budget that includes last-minute moves to boost flood prevention and partially restore hours at libraries and rec centers.
The final budget pays for some new expenditures by pairing up police officers in patrol cars more frequently versus having them patrol alone — a change opposed by the city’s police chief.
Other late additions include money for an engineering team that analyzes bike lanes, a bridge in western Mission Valley and two police sergeants — one focused on graffiti and another on registering sex offenders.
The council, which debated the final budget during a contentious public hearing that lasted more than five hours, also came within one vote of eliminating a city contract for automated license plate readers.
The $2 million in savings would have allowed full reversal of Mayor Todd Gloria’s proposed cuts to hours at nine libraries and 24 recreation centers. A full reversal would have cost $3 million, but the final budget includes only $900,000.
In the final budget, four library branches would have their Saturday hours cut in half: La Jolla, Point Loma, downtown and Rancho Bernardo. Two other branches would lose their Monday hours: University Heights and Allied Gardens.
For recreation centers, weekly hours will be cut to 40 at La Jolla, Pacific Beach, Cabrillo, North Clairemont, Ocean Beach, Carmel Mountain Ranch, Hilltop, Tierrasanta, Scripps Ranch, Mira Mesa, Rancho Bernardo, Allied Gardens, San Carlos and Serra Mesa.
The four council members in favor of canceling the contract for license plate readers were Kent Lee, Henry Foster, Vivian Moreno and Sean Elo-Rivera.
They said license plate readers do more harm than good by putting residents under surveillance and providing data that could potentially be used for immigration enforcement.
After the proposal was rejected, Elo-Rivera called it a mistake.
“We’re leaving $2 million in resources on the table that could be opening more rec centers, opening more libraries and opening more parks,” Elo-Rivera said. “I think that’s a shame, and I don’t think we’re safer for it.”
Councilmember Marni von Wilpert said license plate readers help get criminals caught and make the city safer.
“We can go back to the old way of policing if we want, but there will be consequences,” she said.
Von Wilpert was joined in opposition to canceling the contract by Stephen Whitburn, Raul Campillo, Jennifer Campbell and Joe LaCava.
The issue also divided the speakers who attended Tuesday’s hearing.
Larry Webb, leader of a resident group called the Coastal Coalition, said license plate readers are crucial to the city’s understaffed Police Department.
“Eliminating a proven force multiplier will only worsen the challenges,” he said.
Khalid Alexander said the council’s choice was between supporting police with the readers or supporting residents with the kind of crime prevention that comes from better neighborhood services.
“We request you support the people who are begging you to support programs that prevent crime and that you defund the police,” he said.
The mayor didn’t announce Tuesday night whether he would sign the budget or possibly use his line-item veto power to reverse some of the last-minute changes. An announcement was expected Wednesday.
Another contentious issue was making officers share patrol cars to reduce gas and vehicle costs.
Councilmember Henry Foster praised the move, despite concerns raised by the city’s independent budget analyst that it could raise costs for overtime and slow response times.
“Officers don’t show up by themselves,” said Foster, contending that it makes sense for officers to travel together to incidents serious enough that multiple officers respond.
Police Chief Scott Wahl said he would grudgingly figure out how to implement the change, which the labor union representing city police officers has supported.
“We’ll do our best to try to make it work,” Wahl said. “If it was an idea that I thought was a good one, I would have proposed it.”
Deputy City Attorney Leslie Fitzgerald said it was unclear whether Wahl would be required to actually implement the change.
“Although the city charter gives the council the authority to adopt the budget and make cuts, the charter also gives the police chief the power and authority to operate and control the Police Department,” she said.
Other last-minute additions included $750,000 for a program that helps small businesses, $900,000 to help council offices fund community events and $200,000 to restore a position devoted to promoting San Diego as a setting for movies and TV.
The final budget includes $2 million to clear flood channels, responding to a request from Fire Chief Robert Logan.
The council also restored funding for the Office of Child and Youth Success, expanded a wellness program for city lifeguards and funded 24-hour security for a storage site on 20th Street for homeless people.
The council showed some spending restraint Tuesday when it chose to place $1.7 million in excess cash from the ongoing fiscal year into the city’s relative sparse reserve fund.
It’s the first time the city has contributed to the reserve fund since 2023. The fund will now rise from $207 million to $209 million — about $80 million below where the independent budget analyst says it should be.
The council’s vote marks the climax of one of the most controversial budget seasons in many years, with officials trying to close a $146 million gap just one year after making unpopular cuts to close a $250 million deficit.
Arts funding had been expected to be the most controversial issue during final budget negotiations, but proposed cuts of $11.8 million were mostly reversed Friday with a deal redirecting $6 million in convention center expansion funding to arts and a $3 million philanthropic donation.
Other controversial issues during budget season — such as proposals to wipe out the popular December Nights holiday festival and cut neighborhood crime prevention programs — got reversed by the mayor last month.
The final budget includes layoffs, but the chaos of so many last-minute decisions prevented city officials from providing an exact number Tuesday evening. Many employees will also be forced to take unpaid furloughs.
An employee whose position is eliminated in the final budget told the council Tuesday that such cuts come with consequences.
“I’m not here to save my job,” said Marc Frederick, a program manager focused on city real estate. “Based on my experience, the quality, quantity and efficiency of these transactions will go down.”
San Diego, CA
Adobe Falls: The elusive waterfall that briefly returns after San Diego rains
Blink, and you might miss it.
Adobe Falls isn’t Niagara Falls — or anything close — but after winter rains, a seasonal waterfall briefly appears in a narrow Del Cerro canyon, hidden beneath streets, homes, and San Diego State University property.
The waterfall forms along Alvarado Creek, which drains parts of eastern San Diego, including the SDSU area and surrounding neighborhoods. In wet months, runoff moves through a steep canyon and drops over a short rock ledge known locally as Adobe Falls. In dry periods, the flow often fades to a trickle or disappears entirely, leaving exposed sandstone and a shaded canyon bed.
What makes the site stand out is its setting. Above the canyon are Del Cerro residential streets and university property tied to San Diego State. Below it, Alvarado Creek continues west as part of the Mission Valley watershed, eventually feeding into the San Diego River system. Like many urban drainages in San Diego, its flow is shaped by stormwater runoff, paved surfaces, and altered drainage patterns tied to development.

Access is restricted. The canyon sits on a mix of SDSU and city-managed land and has long been closed to the public due to safety concerns, including steep terrain, erosion, and unstable footing after rain. Although widely referenced in maps and online posts, it is not an official trail or recreation site.
The canyon itself pre-dates modern development in Del Cerro. It is part of a broader network of inland waterways and canyon corridors used for thousands of years by the Kumeyaay, whose presence shaped movement and settlement patterns across the region.
In the mid-20th century, as Del Cerro developed, homes and roads were built along canyon rims rather than through them, leaving Alvarado Creek intact as a drainage system. Adobe Falls remained within that corridor even as surrounding hillsides filled with residential and institutional development.
Today, Adobe Falls remains a small but persistent reminder that San Diego’s natural drainage systems still function within a heavily built environment — appearing briefly after storms, then receding back into the canyon until the next rain.
Read more history stories here, and do you have a story to tell? Send an email to DebbieSklar@cox.net.
Sources:
City of San Diego – Stormwater & Watershed Division (Alvarado Creek / Mission Valley watershed)
San Diego State University – planning and environmental impact documentation for adjacent canyon areas
U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) – San Diego County watershed and hydrology mapping (Alvarado Creek / San Diego River system context)
San Diego History Center – Kumeyaay regional land use and inland canyon corridor history
City of San Diego Planning Department – land use records and access restrictions for Adobe Falls area
California State Historic Landmark files – Adobe Falls (Landmark No. 80)
San Diego, CA
Former City Manager, Jack McGrory: Straight Talk About San Diego, Part 2
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San Diego, CA
Feds Will Finally Help Oceanside 73 Years After Admitting Fault for Its Disappearing Beaches
When the U.S. military built the Camp Pendleton Harbor complex just north of Oceanside in 1942, it didn’t set out to steal Oceanside’s beaches for decades to come.
But that’s exactly what’s been happening for the past 73 years.
In 1953, the federal government admitted that construction of harbor jetties at Camp Pendleton was directly contributing to the erosion of Oceanside’s beaches. The jetties block the ocean’s currents that carry sand along the coast, which causes Oceanside’s beaches south of the military base to lose out on sand that would have naturally flowed to them.
Rising sea levels caused by climate change also play a part, but in Oceanside, naturally occurring erosion has been exacerbated by the military base.
But the military is only just now stepping in to help. While the government’s admission of guilt seemed like a win, it somewhat backfired; because the federal government was on the hook for the entire cost, the project got swallowed by a bureaucratic black hole. Tired of waiting, Oceanside launched its own plan to save its beaches, one the military now refuses to help fund.
What Took so Long
In 2000, Congress passed a law mandating the Army Corps to study how it could restore Oceanside’s beaches to pre-harbor conditions.
The government was supposed to pay for the study and complete it in 44 months. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers finally released the draft report of the study earlier this month – 26 years later.“Studies require both authorization and funding,” said Shawn Davis, public affairs specialist for the Army Corps, via email. “While the study was initially authorized in 2000, there have been gaps in funding that have impacted the timeline to complete the study.”
Those funding gaps happened until 2022 when Rep. Mike Levin, D-San Juan Capistrano, whose district includes much of North County’s coastal cities, helped secure $1.8 million in federal funding and another $2.27 million in 2025 to complete the study.
So, why did the funding dry up for so long at the federal level? According to Davis, “federal projects can only proceed and continue with appropriations from Congress.”
In other words, the project was stuck in bureaucratic limbo; it had the legal authorization to exist, but it couldn’t secure funds in a highly competitive budget that favored bigger projects.
Jayme Timberlake, Oceanside’s coastal zone administrator, told Voice of San Diego that the city and its representatives tried lobbying Congress for years, but there are often a lot of unknowns when it comes to Army Corps projects.
“It’s very political. It’s very much dependent on what the rest of the nation is going through and where the funds are going and how they’re getting allocated,” Timberlake said. “It’s very tough to navigate and there’s a lot of risk associated with it, meaning we can’t really rely on it.”
Other coastal cities received a plan before Oceanside did: The Corps completed similar studies for two sand replenishment efforts. One is a joint effort in Encinitas and Solana Beach, the other in San Clemente. Congress has already approved both of these projects for sand deliveries every seven to 10 years for the next 50 years.
“The difference is that the … projects that are happening in Encinitas, Solana Beach and San Clemente were initiated by a request to the Army Corps from these cites, and they were cost shared,” Timberlake said.
That means these cities are paying 35 percent of the costs, and the federal government is paying 65 percent. That also applies to sand deliveries every seven to 10 years. These types of projects can cost upwards of $100 million.
“In Oceanside, our mitigation project, at least the study was not cost shared. It was the full responsibility of the federal government because they admitted fault,” Timberlake said. “So, it’s really unfortunate that the mitigation for Oceanside beaches didn’t happen before those requested projects.”
Meanwhile, Oceanside’s Sand Was Disappearing

While Oceanside officials and residents waited for the government’s help, the city’s beaches were rapidly disappearing before their eyes.
Previous Army Corps studies estimate the Harbor has caused a loss of 1.4 to 1.6 million cubic yards of sand volume from Oceanside’s beaches since 1942, with some areas retreating at a rate of 6.6 feet per year. That’s 84 years of consistent and severe sand loss.
El Niño conditions over the years have also exacerbated the problem.
“There was such a dramatic loss of sand that the community really started asking for solutions,” Timberlake said. “There’s a whole generation that has been able to use the beach and then have it be gone, so it has triggered a lot of community interest.”
After 20 years of waiting, Oceanside decided to take matters into its own hands.
“Once there was momentum to fix the problem itself and not rely on the Army Corps any further, the city did a feasibility study in 2020, and that study really unearthed all the possible things that Oceanside could do in the short and long term to fix its beaches,” Timberlake said.
A few years later, city officials held a competition that brought together three design teams from around the world to develop sand retention pilot projects. They chose a concept that includes the construction of two headlands that will aim to stabilize sand on the back beach, with an offshore artificial reef aimed at slowing down nearshore erosive forces.
The project is called RE:Beach and it’s already funded up to the construction phase, Timberlake said. The city has applied for a few different grants to cover construction, which will cost upwards of $60 million.
Timberlake said the city asked the Army Corps to help fund the rest of the RE:Beach project, and the Army Corps denied the request.
The Government’s Plan

Oceanside’s RE:Beach project and the federal government’s recent recommendations won’t conflict with each other, Timberlake said. In fact, the two projects will complement one another.
The Army Corps’ draft feasibility report identified beach nourishment (a lot of sand) as the tentatively selected plan to restore Oceanside’s beaches.
It calls for dredging 4 million cubic yards of sand from an offshore borrow site and then placing it along Oceanside’s beaches, with the goal of sustaining a minimum 85-foot wide beach from Oceanside Harbor south to Buena Vista Lagoon. Sand replenishment would be 1 million cubic yards the first cycle, then repeated every 10 years.
Realistically, though, it could be another couple decades before Oceanside’s beaches start receiving sand, Timberlake said.
That’s because there are other competing projects the Army Corps is working on. Plus,, Congress still has to appropriate funding for the rest of the project to move forward once the feasibility study is completed. Initial costs of construction are currently estimated to be $243,540,000, Davis, spokesperson for the Army Corps, said via email.
It’s still unclear if the government will cover the full costs of construction and the subsequent sand renourishments for Oceanside, but Levin told Voice he thinks it’s unlikely.
“I will advocate for every penny to come from the federal government, given that the government did acknowledge responsibility,” Levin said. “But I do also know how the Army Corps works, and it’s very likely they’ll want some sort of cost share.”
Meanwhile, the Trump administration is proposing major funding cuts to the Army Corps’ budget for fiscal year 2027. If those cuts are approved by Congress, it could have an impact on projects like this one.
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