San Diego, CA
Study searches for funding for Balboa Park infrastructure

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) – At greater than 100 years outdated, Balboa Park — the “Jewel of San Diego” — has misplaced a bit of luster, and it’ll take tons of of thousands and thousands of {dollars} to make it shine for the subsequent 100 years.
“There are thousands and thousands of {dollars} of upkeep and maintenance that must be taken care of,” says Tad Parzen, the President and CEO of the Burnham Middle for Neighborhood Development. “Drainage, facades, structural integrity, plumbing, electrical, all of the non-sexy stuff.”
Parzen’s group simply revealed a research, “Getting ready for Balboa Park’s Subsequent 100 Years.” It discovered the park wants $444.2 million price of key infrastructure upkeep. However Parzen says discovering the funding for all of that’s troublesome.
That is why the report lists seven concepts to assist:
- A income measure, like a gross sales or parcel tax or a bond, that the general public may approve in an election
- A dedication from the Metropolis of San Diego to dedicate a portion of the present or future resort taxes (Transient Occupancy Tax) to the park
- Elevated fundraising from nonprofit teams
- Making a “Property Enterprise Enchancment District” to handle the park and its myriad points
- Extra industrial exercise within the park, like new eating places, purchasing, or different actions that might elevate cash by means of hire, taxes, or each
- An oversight committee to handle funding, development, and extra
- Making a separate, cabinet-level metropolis division that offers particularly with Balboa Park
Parzen says it’s going to take a mix of all these concepts to ensure Balboa Park stays stunning.
“If we lose this asset, we lose a lot of what’s San Diego,” he says. “We won’t let that occur, it is too necessary to fail.”
It is a problem Metropolis Councilman Stephen Whitburn, whose district contains the park, is properly conscious of.
“We nonetheless contemplate Balboa Park our Crown Jewel,” Whitburn says. “If we need to hold Balboa Park because the crown jewel that we all know that it’s we have got to put money into caring for the park and we have got to ensure that we’re doing that in an environment friendly and efficient method.”
That is to not say the Metropolis has uncared for the park. ABC 10News has coated quite a few initiatives over the previous few years to beautify the park and improve its points of interest.
9 new homes have opened as a part of the Worldwide Cottages. The Metropolis constructed a brand new plaza in entrance of the Air and Area Museum. The historic carousel underwent a serious restoration. The Botanic Backyard constructing is being fully rebuilt. And there is a new deck across the Moreton Bay Fig Tree.
However Parzen says all of that’s beauty. His group’s research focuses on the important areas that hold Balboa Park in working order.
“It appears nice,” Parzen says “But when we do not hurry up and do one thing, we’ll be in bother and lose this asset.”
The research would not provide any conclusions. As a substitute, Parzen says it is a place to begin to a broader dialog that San Diego must should hold the Park as stunning as ever.

San Diego, CA
John Benjamin Wilhoit – San Diego Union-Tribune

John Benjamin Wilhoit
OBITUARY
May the wind under your wings bear you
where the sun sails and the moon walks.
On a sunny Sunday afternoon, John, a lifelong sailor, set forth on his last adventure. He died peacefully at his “forever home” – the downtown condo he and his wife, Sandee, shared for 24 years.
John was born in Albuquerque, New Mexico, the second child of Jack and Beryl Mae Wilhoit. He graduated from Point Loma High School, and went on to earn his BA from UCSD and an MA in Urban Planning from San Diego State. John’s career was spent working for the City of San Diego, from where he retired in 2006 as a Senior City Planner.
From a young age, John loved sailing around Mission Bay, and as a youth enjoyed racing out of the Mission Bay Yacht Club, where his name is inscribed on a perpetual trophy. Nearly every Saturday, when the temperature was at least 70 degrees, he and Sandee would be out on the bay sailing his catamaran. That would most often be followed by a Padres game, as he was also an ardent Padres fan and season ticket holder.
John loved the beach, watching sports, traveling, listening to his LP collection and watching old Western re-runs on TV. When they weren’t enjoying all the events in the Gaslamp, John and Sandee enjoyed traveling to their favorite haunts – Borrego Springs, Hawaii, Santa Fe and Cuba.
John’s dry sense of humor and clever mind will be greatly missed. He was a generous and talented man, who loved the environment and would always help out someone in need.
John is survived by his wife, Sandee, and three grown stepchildren – Scott, Erin and Robb. He is pre-deceased by his mother, father, and sister, Pam.
No services are planned, as per his wishes.
San Diego, CA
San Diego is paying out another $700K to 2 people injured on city streets

San Diego is paying out $700,000 to settle two injury lawsuits, one involving a pedestrian in San Ysidro and another involving a motorcycle rider in northern Clairemont.
The settlements, which the City Council approved this week, continue a long string of city payouts related to decaying infrastructure alleged to have caused injuries.
One man is getting a $500,000 payout for injuries he suffered in March 2021 when raised asphalt bumps on Clairemont Mesa Boulevard caused him to lose control of his Harley-Davidson “fatboy” motorcycle.
A lawsuit he filed against the city in 2022 says he suffered a frontal lobe contusion and other traumatic brain injuries that will make it hard for him ever to work again.
Doctors found moderate to severe deficits in his executive functioning and moderate to profound deficits in memory, attention and language, the suit says.
The payout covers medical expenses, lost wages and diminished earning capacity.
The man was headed eastbound near the Clairemont Town Square shopping plaza when the crash happened.
An issue in the case was that he was wearing a “novelty” helmet that isn’t compliant with state law. It’s not clear whether that lowered the payout amount.
Separately, a woman is receiving a $199,000 payout for injuries she suffered in December 2022 when she tripped and fell on a piece of metal in San Ysidro that remained from a removed traffic sign that was allegedly cut down in a negligent way.
She was injured while walking northbound on East San Ysidro Boulevard, just north of the international border crossing.
In a lawsuit she filed against the city in 2023, she said her injuries included a fractured finger and damage to her arms, back, neck and head. The suit says she suffered “numerous internal and external injuries” that appear to be “permanent in character.”
Her payout covers medical expenses and lost earnings.
The council approved both payouts on Tuesday. Jury trials had been scheduled in both cases.
Originally Published:
San Diego, CA
San Diego preparing to put downtown’s old Central Library on the market

After more than two years exploring its options, San Diego is now preparing to market the empty old Central Library at Eighth Avenue and E Street for sale or lease to maximize redevelopment of the half-block, downtown property where height limits are not a constraining factor.
Thursday, San Diego’s Land Use and Housing Committee voted 3-0 in favor of declaring the old Central Library at 820 E St. as surplus land.
The surplus designation means the city no longer needs the facility and has ruled out other options, such as redeveloping the property entirely for low-income housing. With the designation, the city can sell or lease the site for redevelopment — but it must follow the noticing and negotiating requirements of California’s Surplus Land Act.
Under the law, bidders need to set aside at least 25% of proposed residential units for affordable housing, meaning deed-restricted units rented to low- and very-low-income families making 80% or less of the area median income.
Although committee members agreed at a high level with Mayor Todd Gloria’s decision to offload the asset, they weren’t ready to give him the authority to seek bids for redevelopment without a broader policy conversation.
“I certainly believe that we should declare this property surplus. What I’m less comfortable with is giving carte blanche to the mayor and city staff to issue the notice availability without the City Council providing some more guidance,” Councilmember Sean Elo-Rivera said.
Elo-Rivera said he first wanted to the see the notice of availability, which is typically a short, stock document that alerts affordable housing developers registered with the state that the city intends to sell or lease its property.
“This is an incredibly important property. It’s an important action,” he said. “It seems appropriate for the council to provide some clear direction, if we choose to do so as a body, in terms of what is included in that notice of availability and what isn’t.”
The committee’s action tees up consideration by the full council at a later date. The future discussion will likely center around how council members can add development obligations to the noticing document without curtailing market demand.
Opened in 1954 and closed in 2013, the old Central Library is a locally designated historic resource that sat empty for nearly a decade before being used intermittently as a temporary homeless shelter, starting in 2023.
Over the years, developers have contemplated various alternative uses, including a 42-story apartment tower proposed by Bosa Development. The tower proposal was eventually scraped by the prolific builder in 2018.
More recently, the facility has been roped into the city’s ongoing conversation about homelessness.
The old Central Library was analyzed as an alternative to the failed Kettner and Vine shelter proposal. However, the estimated cost to renovate the 150,000 square-foot facility’s three floors and two basement levels was recently pegged at $86.8 million. The venue was ruled out as a viable homeless shelter option in February.
The mayor’s request to offload the city-owned asset dates to March 2023, when San Diego was preparing to put its Civic Center real estate on the market.
At the time, a few council members expressed interest in lumping the property in with the Civic Center blocks and other city-owned land to solicit developer interest for everything at the same time. The idea was to make excess city land available to quickly boost the production of homes for people of varying income levels. City staff recommended instead that the old Central Library be evaluated independently from the other sites.
The Civic Center blocks, which went on to be advertised for lease or sale per the Surplus Land Act a few months later, attracted no interest.
San Diego, pending approval by the full council, will also solicit interest in the old Central Library under the Surplus Land Act. The law was amended in 2019 to prioritize affordable housing when government-owned land is sold or leased.
The process begins with the notice of availability, which starts the clock on a 60-day window for interested bidders to respond with redevelopment plans. After the window, the law requires the city to engage in a 90-day negotiation period with respondents and give priority to the entity proposing the highest number of affordable housing units.
The city expects to publish the notice of availability for the old Central Library in the summer, Christina Bibler, director of the city’s Economic Development Department, told the Union-Tribune.
The timeline could get tripped up if council members take issue with the noticing document, which was not included in the agenda materials for Thursday’s meetings.
The current iteration of the document was described by Lucy Contreras, the city’s deputy director of real estate, as consistent with the Surplus Land Act noticing requirements. Interested parties will need to meet the affordable housing requirement, as well as comply with guidelines pertaining to the redevelopment of historic properties. The old Central Library’s historic elements include the building’s exterior, the csidewalk with the city seal, and two, city-owned sculptures on the facade.
“The intent is for us to put forward (a notice of availability) that either puts the property out for purchase or for lease, with the intent of maximizing the redevelopment potential of the site,” Contreras said. “If there were specific conditions that were going to be proposed in the (notice of availability), this would be the time, as well as with council, to have a conversation about (that).”
Elo-Rivera said he wanted to see the document before recommending additions.
“Pardon me for not just trusting the process here, but there’s nothing for us to read,” he said. “The council may decide that before we just open it up to the market and see what capitalism does for us, we instead draw some parameters and see if we can get a little bit closer to our goals on our first attempt.”
Councilmember Raul Campillo said his priorities for the property are on-site child care and residential units large enough for families.
Real estate analyst Gary London, a principal of local firm London Moeder Advisors, cautioned against the city adding more conditions in a weak real estate market challenged with limited access to capital and economic uncertainty.
The Surplus Land Act requirement to reserve 25% of residential units as affordable already challenges the feasibility of any project, he said.
“Whenever the city interferes with the marketplace, things go wrong,” London said. “While I agree with (Campillo) in terms of the kind of concept that ought to come out of (the solicitation), the idea of shoving that down a developer’s throat is basically inviting lower bids or a lack of bids.”
Councilmembers Kent Lee, Elo-Rivera and Campillo voted to pass on their recommendation for approval of the surplus designation to the full council. Councilmember Vivian Moreno was absent.
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